Beverly Hills USD v. LA Metro. ( 2015 )


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  • Filed 11/2/15 (unmodified opn. attached)
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FOUR
    BEVERLY HILLS UNIFIED SCHOOL
    DISTRICT,                                           B256605
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                    (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BS137606)
    v.
    LOS ANGELES COUNTY
    METROPOLITAN
    TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    THE CITY OF BEVERLY HILLS,                          B256753
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                    (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BS137607)
    v.
    ORDER MODIFYING OPINION
    LOS ANGELES COUNTY                                     [No Change in Judgment]
    METROPOLITAN
    TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    THE COURT*
    It is ordered that the opinion filed herein on October 22, 2015, be modified
    as follows:
    On page 18, in the first paragraph, the cost should be changed from “$6
    million” to “$56 million”.
    There is no change in the judgment.
    *EPSTEIN, P. J.          WILLHITE, J.              MANELLA, J.
    2
    Filed 10/22/15 (unmodified version)
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FOUR
    BEVERLY HILLS UNIFIED SCHOOL
    DISTRICT,                                      B256605
    Plaintiff and Appellant,               (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BS137606)
    v.
    LOS ANGELES COUNTY
    METROPOLITAN
    TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    THE CITY OF BEVERLY HILLS,                     B256753
    Plaintiff and Appellant,               (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BS137607)
    v.
    LOS ANGELES COUNTY
    METROPOLITAN
    TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    APPEAL from judgments of the Superior Court for Los Angeles County,
    John A. Torribio, Judge. Affirmed.
    Murphy & Evertz, Douglas J. Evertz, Bradford B. Grabske; Horvitz & Levy,
    Barry R. Levy, Jeremy B. Rosen and Mark A. Kressel for Plaintiff and Appellant
    Beverly Hills Unified School District.
    Daniel P. Selmi; Shute, Mihaly & Weinberger, Sara A. Clark and Robert S.
    Perlmutter for Plaintiff and Appellant The City of Beverly Hills.
    Mark J. Saladino, County Counsel, Charles M. Safer, Assistant County
    Counsel, and Ronald W. Stamm, Principal Deputy County Counsel; Remy Moose
    Manley, Whitman F. Manley, Laura M. Harris and Tiffany K. Wright for
    Defendant and Respondent.
    In May 2012, the board of the Los Angeles County Metropolitan
    Transportation Authority (Metro) approved the Westside Subway Extension
    Project (the Project), which will extend the Metro Purple Line heavy rail transit
    (HRT) subway system to the Westside of Los Angeles. As approved, the Project
    will add almost nine miles to the Purple Line, with seven new stations. One of
    those new stations will be located in Century City, at Constellation Boulevard and
    Avenue of the Stars (the Constellation station). To reach this station, the subway
    will travel through a tunnel to be constructed under Beverly Hills High School (the
    high school).
    During the planning and environmental review process, the Beverly Hills
    Unified School District (School District) and the City of Beverly Hills (City)
    objected to the placement of the subway tunnel under the high school (or other
    properties located in Beverly Hills). Following Metro’s approval of the Project,
    2
    School District and City filed petitions for writ of mandate in the trial court,
    challenging that approval. School District’s petition alleged that Metro failed to
    comply with the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) (Pub. Resources
    Code, § 21000 et seq.). City’s petition also alleged that Metro failed to comply
    with CEQA; in addition, City alleged that Metro violated its statutory obligations
    under Public Utilities Code1 sections 30639 et seq. by failing to provide a full and
    fair hearing. The trial court denied both petitions.
    On appeal, School District contends the judgment should be reversed
    because the final environmental impact statement/environmental impact report
    (EIS/EIR) relied on significant new and different information that was not in the
    draft EIS/EIR, and therefore Metro was required to prepare and recirculate a new
    draft EIS/EIR for public comment. City contends that Metro violated CEQA by
    failing to recirculate a new draft EIS/EIR and by failing to analyze localized air
    pollution and public health impacts from construction of the Project. In addition,
    City contends that Metro’s hearing under the Public Utilities Code (the transit
    hearing) violated statutory requirements because Metro prevented City from cross-
    examining or rebutting Metro’s expert witnesses. Finally, City contends (for the
    first time on appeal) that Metro’s decision following the transit hearing must be set
    aside as not supported by substantial evidence because the decision was based
    entirely on hearsay.
    We conclude that substantial evidence supports Metro’s decision not to
    recirculate the EIS/EIR, and that the EIS/EIR adequately discussed air pollution
    and public health impacts. We also conclude that Metro did not violate the
    statutory requirements in conducting the transit hearing, that City received a full
    and fair hearing, and that substantial evidence supports Metro’s decision and
    1
    Further undesignated statutory references are to the Public Utilities Code.
    3
    findings of fact in light of the issues tendered for hearing. Accordingly, we affirm
    the trial court’s denial of School District’s and City’s petitions.
    BACKGROUND
    A.    History of the Project
    As anyone who has lived in Los Angeles over the past few decades knows,
    travelling between the Westside of Los Angeles and Downtown Los Angeles
    during commuting hours can be extremely frustrating. This is especially true when
    travelling eastbound in the late afternoon or early evening hours, when typical
    travel speeds on the Santa Monica Freeway and side streets are no more than 8
    miles per hour. Since the early 1980s, local, regional, and federal transportation
    planners have looked for solutions to this problem.
    1.     Early Planning Attempts
    In 1985, during the planning for the Metro Red Line (which originally was
    going to follow Wilshire Boulevard to Fairfax Avenue and then proceed north to
    Hollywood and the San Fernando Valley), naturally occurring methane gas caused
    a fire at a store located along the proposed path (referred to as an “alignment”). As
    a result of an investigation into that incident, Congress prohibited federal funding
    for subway construction within a designated “Methane Gas Risk Zone” that
    included Wilshire Boulevard from Rossmore Avenue to San Vicente Boulevard.
    Congress ordered that a re-engineering study be conducted to determine an
    appropriate alignment to link Downtown Los Angeles, the San Fernando Valley,
    and the Westside while avoiding the Methane Gas Risk Zone. More than 40
    possible alignments were reviewed, and six alignments were studied in detail.
    Ultimately, the alignment chosen to link Downtown Los Angeles and the San
    Fernando Valley -- i.e., the Metro Red Line -- ran from Union Station in
    4
    Downtown Los Angeles to Wilshire/Vermont, where it split into two separate
    lines, one travelling west to Wilshire/Western and the other travelling north to
    Hollywood and North Hollywood. That alignment was approved for construction,
    and was completed in 2000.2
    In the meantime, studies continued in order to determine an appropriate
    alignment for an extension of the subway to the Westside that would avoid the
    Methane Gas Risk Zone. In 1998, Metro suspended work on those studies after it
    concluded it did not have sufficient local matching funds to finance HRT subway
    projects in the Westside corridor. Instead, Metro’s studies focused on alternatives
    to an HRT subway extension, such as Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) and Light Rail
    Transit (LRT) lines.
    2.     Steps Leading up to Current Project
    In 2005, Metro and the City of Los Angeles asked the American Public
    Transportation Association to organize a peer review panel of experts to reconsider
    the feasibility of tunneling within the Methane Gas Risk Zone along Wilshire
    Boulevard. A peer review panel was assembled, and it concluded that in light of
    the advances in tunneling technology and practice over the previous 20 years,
    tunneling in that zone could be undertaken at no greater risk than other subway
    systems in the United States. As a result of the panel’s findings, legislation was
    passed in Congress to repeal the prohibition on subway construction along
    Wilshire Boulevard; the repeal became effective in 2008. Also as a result of the
    panel’s findings, Metro’s board of directors authorized the resumption of an
    2
    The line that ran from Union Station to Wilshire/Western subsequently was
    renamed the Metro Purple Line.
    5
    “Alternatives Analysis” (AA) study for all reasonable fixed-guideway transit
    alternatives,3 including the previously excluded subway alternatives.
    a.     The Project Development Process
    Conducting an AA study is the required first step of the project development
    process for federally funded “New Starts” projects under the Federal Transit
    Administration (FTA). The purpose of the AA study is to focus on a specific
    transportation need (or set of needs) in a given corridor, identify alternative actions
    to address those needs, and generate the information needed to select a preferred
    project for implementation, or a smaller set of viable alternatives for further study.
    The study identifies and evaluates a wide range of alternatives that are then
    screened against established criteria (such as costs, benefits, environmental and
    community impacts, and financial feasibility), and the most promising alternatives
    are recommended for further evaluation in the next step of the New Starts process.
    The second step of the New Starts process is the draft EIS/EIR4 and
    “Advanced Conceptual Engineering” (ACE) phase. This step begins with a
    “scoping” process, during which the lead agency holds scoping and community
    outreach meetings, as well as meetings with public agencies and officials, to solicit
    input on the alternatives carried forward from the AA study. Following the
    scoping process, a draft EIS/EIR is prepared. Public hearings are held on the draft
    EIS/EIR, and a “Locally Preferred Alternative” (LPA) is selected. The local
    3
    Metro’s fixed guideway system is comprised of HRT (Metro Red Line and Metro
    Purple Line), LRT (Metro Blue Line, Metro Green Line, Metro Gold Line, and Metro
    Expo Line), and BRT (Metro Orange Line).
    4
    A combined EIS/EIR allows the lead agency to simultaneously comply with both
    the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and CEQA.
    6
    agency then applies to the FTA for entry into the third step in the process, the
    “Preliminary Engineering” (PE) phase.
    If the FTA grants entry into the PE phase, a final EIS/EIR is prepared. Once
    the final EIS/EIR is approved, the lead agency applies for entry into the FTA final
    design phase, which includes the preparation of final construction plans.
    b.     Metro’s AA Study
    In October 2007, Metro began the AA study phase with an early scoping
    process to help define the appropriate range of issues and the depth of analysis to
    be addressed in the AA. Metro identified primary alignments during the early
    scoping meetings based upon its previous planning studies for the Westside
    Extension. Those alignments, which included alignments along Wilshire
    Boulevard (from the current terminus of the Metro Purple Line) and Santa Monica
    Boulevard (from the Hollywood Boulevard/Highland Avenue station on the Metro
    Red Line), represented street rights-of-way that reasonably could be used in an at-
    grade, elevated, or subway configuration. Metro also presented a range of transit
    modes (HRT, LRT, BRT, and monorail) to be considered.
    Metro received extensive comments from the public during early scoping.
    Most of those comments strongly supported the HRT subway mode over the other
    transit modes. A majority of comments on the alignments supported the Wilshire
    Boulevard alignment, although a significant number supported the Santa Monica
    Boulevard alignment and/or a combined Wilshire-Santa Monica alignment. A
    number of comments suggested route alignment deviations to serve major activity
    centers not located directly on those routes, and other comments suggested
    alternates to some of the potential station locations that were presented; for
    example, several comments suggested a station at Constellation Boulevard rather
    than at Santa Monica Boulevard in Century City.
    7
    Based on the results of the early scoping process, 17 build alternatives were
    developed for evaluation in the AA study, in five major categories: (1) Wilshire
    Boulevard-based HRT subway alignments; (2) Santa Monica Boulevard-based
    HRT subway alignments; (3) combined Wilshire Boulevard/Santa Monica
    Boulevard HRT subway alignments; (4) HRT, LRT, and monorail elevated
    alignments; and (5) BRT alignments. In addition, the AA study evaluated a “No
    Build Alternative” and a “Transportation Systems Management” alternative (i.e.,
    an alternative in which the existing Metro Rapid Bus service and local bus service
    in the Westside study area would be improved with more frequent service), as
    required by the FTA.
    Once the alternatives were defined, they were screened and evaluated
    through a series of steps. First, each alternative was screened to determine if it
    would meet the goals and objectives of the Project.5 This screening resulted in the
    elimination of 12 of the 17 initial build alternatives, and the five most promising
    alternatives were carried forward for more detailed analysis. All of the HRT
    subway alternatives included two options for stations in Century City -- the
    Constellation station and the Santa Monica station -- with two possible alignments
    from Wilshire/Beverly to the Constellation station.
    In the next step, the merits of each of these five alternatives were evaluated
    on a more detailed basis and compared against the seven identified goals to
    determine which alternatives to recommend to be carried into the draft EIS/EIR.
    This more detailed evaluation resulted in a recommendation to carry forward two
    build alternatives -- Alternative 1 (a Wilshire Boulevard alignment extending the
    Metro Purple Line via Wilshire Boulevard to the City of Santa Monica) and
    5
    There were seven goals identified -- mobility improvement, transit-supportive land
    use policies and conditions, cost-effectiveness, project feasibility, equity, environmental
    considerations, and public acceptance -- based upon FTA guidance.
    8
    Alternative 11 (a Wilshire Boulevard/Santa Monica Boulevard combined
    alignment that extends a subway from the Metro Red Line Hollywood/Highland
    station via Santa Monica Boulevard to connect to the extended Metro Purple Line)
    -- as well as the required “No Build” and “Transportation Systems Management”
    alternatives. The AA study also determined that five issues would need to be
    studied during the EIS/EIR process, and that resolution of those issues would lead
    to the selection of an LPA and preparation of an application to the FTA for
    advancement into the PE phase. One of those issues was station locations and
    physical alignments in West Hollywood, Century City, and Westwood.
    The AA study took approximately 14 months to complete, during which
    Metro conducted several rounds of public meetings and targeted stakeholder
    meetings and received more than 900 comments. The Metro board approved the
    AA study in January 2009.
    B.    Development of the Draft EIS/EIR
    The draft EIS/EIR phase began with another scoping process. During this
    process, Metro presented the two recommended build alternatives to the public in a
    series of NEPA/CEQA scoping meetings. The meetings were held between March
    and May 2009 for the purpose of soliciting further public input on those
    alternatives.
    With regard to the Century City station location, four options were
    considered: Santa Monica Boulevard at Avenue of the Stars (previously identified
    as the Santa Monica station), Santa Monica Boulevard at Century Park East (the
    Santa Monica East station), Constellation Boulevard at Avenue of the Stars
    (previously identified as the Constellation station), and Avenue of the Stars
    between Constellation Boulevard and Santa Monica Boulevard (the Avenue of the
    Stars station). With regard to the alignment from Beverly Hills to Century City,
    9
    three general alignments were presented to the public: the Santa Monica
    Boulevard route, the Constellation route, and the Avenue of the Stars route. The
    Santa Monica Boulevard route would proceed west from the Wilshire/Rodeo
    station beneath Santa Monica Boulevard, and would run to the Santa Monica East
    or Santa Monica Station. The Constellation route would proceed southwest from
    the Wilshire/Rodeo station beneath residential neighborhoods to Constellation
    Boulevard and follow Constellation Boulevard to the Constellation station. The
    Avenue of the Stars route would proceed southwest from the Wilshire/Rodeo
    station beneath residential neighborhoods to Olympic Boulevard, where it would
    turn west to reach the either the Constellation station or the Avenue of the Stars
    station.
    During the scoping meetings, Metro received comments from the public on,
    among other things, the Century City station location options and the alignment
    options from Beverly Hills to Century City. A majority of the comments related to
    the Century City location expressed support for the Constellation station location,
    because it was closer to the center of Century City. As part of the scoping process,
    the City of Beverly Hills provided a list of concerns and issues it asked Metro to
    address during the draft EIS/EIR process. Those concerns and issues included
    construction impacts and duration of construction, safety and sustainability of
    above-ground infrastructure and buildings (noting that City’s mass transit
    committee preferred that the route be under Wilshire and Santa Monica Boulevards
    rather than under commercial and residential properties), and potential noise and
    vibration impacts of underground drilling.
    Based on the public comments, Metro made some refinements in several
    areas, including refinements to two of the three routes from Beverly Hills to
    Century City presented at the scoping meetings. The refined Constellation route
    would proceed west from the Wilshire/Rodeo station underneath Santa Monica
    10
    Boulevard; it would turn southwest at Lasky Drive, passing beneath the high
    school, and continue west to Constellation Boulevard. Metro held additional
    community outreach meetings from August 2009 through June 2010 to review the
    refinements with the public and to solicit further input on those refinements.
    Those meetings included a lunch time open house in Century City to reach out to
    the business community and a special community meeting at Roxbury Park in
    Beverly Hills to provide an update on the proposed alignments linking the
    Wilshire/Rodeo and Century City stations.
    The four Century City station locations, and the alignments that would be
    required to accommodate each location, underwent a preliminary engineering and
    environmental evaluation focused on engineering feasibility, construction
    feasibility, NEPA/CEQA considerations and community preference, urban design
    pros and cons, user benefits, and costs. Based upon the preliminary analysis,
    Metro eliminated the Santa Monica East and the Avenue of the Stars station
    locations and determined that the Santa Monica station and the Constellation
    station would be carried forward into the draft EIS/EIR for a more thorough
    analysis.6 Also based upon the preliminary analysis, Metro further refined the
    Beverly Hills to Century City alignment options, developing two routes to the
    Constellation station (the Constellation North route and the Constellation South
    route), and determined that the Santa Monica route and both Constellation routes
    would be further analyzed in the draft EIS/EIR.
    6
    It was noted in the preliminary analysis that the Santa Monica station would have
    significant exposure to the Santa Monica fault because the alignment would run parallel
    to the fault, while the other alignments would cross the fault in a perpendicular direction,
    which generally is preferred.
    11
    C.    Contents of the Draft EIS/EIR
    Metro circulated the draft EIS/EIR on September 3, 2010 for a 45-day
    review and comment period. In its preface, the draft EIS/EIR stated that “[t]his
    Draft EIS/EIR is designed to take the decision process one step further by
    evaluating heavy rail subway extension alternatives in greater detail, including the
    following [items].” Among the items listed was “Station and alignment location
    options -- Consideration whether to include certain stations, as well as the location
    of stations where options exist; comparison of optional routes for connecting
    station locations.”
    The executive summary of the draft EIS/EIR explained that “Metro refined
    the two AA Study Alternatives and developed alternatives with different lengths to
    meet the fiscal constraints and funding timelines identified in the [Long Range
    Transportation Plan]. This Draft EIS/EIR includes five Build Alternatives, station
    and alignment options, the base stations (i.e., stations without options), other
    components of the Build Alternatives, and minimum operable segments.[7] [¶] A
    base alternative for the Build Alternatives and stations is described in Chapter 2 of
    this Draft EIS/EIR. Alignment (or segment) and station options to the base
    alternative alignment and stations are also included. The options are compared
    against the base alternatives and base stations to determine, among many
    environmental factors and goals and objectives, which more adequately meet the
    Project’s Purpose and Need.”
    The five build alternatives examined in the draft EIS/EIR were as follows.
    Alternative 1 (Westwood/UCLA Extension) extends the Metro Purple Line from
    the Wilshire/Western station to a Westwood/UCLA station, following the Wilshire
    7
    This last sentence was incomplete in the draft EIS/EIR as circulated on
    September 3, 2010. Metro subsequently issued an errata that corrected several errors,
    including that incomplete sentence.
    12
    Boulevard alignment. Alternative 2 (Westwood/Veterans Administration (VA)
    Hospital Extension) extends the Metro Purple Line farther, to the VA Hospital in
    Westwood. Alternative 3 (Santa Monica Extension) extends the Metro Purple Line
    even farther, to Wilshire Boulevard and 4th Street in Santa Monica. Alternative 4
    (Westwood/VA Hospital Extension plus West Hollywood Extension) extends the
    Metro Purple Line as in Alternative 2, and also extends the Metro Red Line from
    the Hollywood/Highland station through West Hollywood, connecting to the
    Wilshire alignment at Robertson and Wilshire Boulevards. Alternative 5 (Santa
    Monica Extension plus West Hollywood Extension) extends the Metro Purple Line
    as in Alternative 3, and extends the Metro Red Line as in Alternative 4. All five
    build alternatives included the two Century City station options (the Santa Monica
    station [referred to as the “base station”] and the Constellation station) and the
    three Beverly Hills to Century City alignment options (the Santa Monica route
    [referred to as the “base segment”], the Constellation North route, and the
    Constellation South route) that resulted from the scoping process for the draft
    EIS/EIR.
    The draft EIS/EIR examined, among other things, air quality impacts from
    the construction and operation of each Project alternative (summarized from the
    “Air Quality Technical Report”), noise and vibration impacts (summarized from
    the “Noise and Vibration Technical Report”), and geologic hazards along each of
    the alternative alignments and at each station location option (summarized from the
    “Geotechnical and Hazardous Materials Technical Report”). The draft EIS/EIR
    then evaluated each of the alignment and station options against various
    environmental factors and the goals and objectives of the Project.
    13
    a.     Air Quality
    The draft EIS/EIR analyzed the air quality impacts from the operation of
    each build alternative (and the “No Build” alternative) at five sites along the
    proposed route, and concluded that operation of any of the build alternatives would
    not cause or exacerbate a violation of applicable ambient air quality standards, and
    would likely reduce regional emission levels.
    The draft EIS/EIR also analyzed air quality impacts from the construction of
    the Project, although it noted that “[a]s the construction schedule is very
    preliminary at this time, construction emissions were estimated for each major
    activity.” The analysis included a breakdown by construction elements (i.e., a
    typical station with tunnel boring machine (TBM) entry/exit sites, a typical station
    without a TBM entry/exit site, and a maintenance facility) of the expected
    emissions of various pollutants, and compared those expected emissions to South
    Coast Air Quality Management District (SCAQMD) thresholds. It concluded that
    SCAQMD thresholds would be exceeded (1) for nitrous oxides for all construction
    elements and (2) for particulate matter smaller than or equal to 10 microns in size
    for construction of a typical station with TBM entry/exit sites.8
    The draft EIS/EIR recommended certain mitigation measures to reduce these
    impacts. It noted that implementation of those mitigation measures would reduce
    the particulate matter impacts to less than significant, and would reduce (although
    not to less than significant) the nitrous oxides impact.
    8
    A significantly more detailed discussion of the methodology used to determine the
    air quality impacts, including the health consequences of the emissions is found in the Air
    Quality Technical Report, which was circulated with the draft EIS/EIR. The air quality
    impacts of construction also were discussed in detail in the Construction and Mitigation
    Technical Report for the draft EIS/EIR.
    14
    b.     Noise and Vibration
    In analyzing the expected noise and vibration impact from the operation of
    the subway, the draft EIS/EIR identified potentially vibration-sensitive buildings
    along the proposed alignments. One of those buildings was the high school.
    Based upon the analysis, Metro concluded that during subway operations, the FTA
    ground-borne vibration criteria were not predicted to be exceeded at any vibration
    sensitive buildings, but that the FTA ground-borne noise criteria was expected to
    be exceeded at several buildings, including the high school. The draft EIS/EIR
    recommended mitigation measures to minimize the potential for ground-borne
    noise impacts, which if implemented would reduce the impacts to a level below the
    threshold of significance.
    With regard to noise and vibration impacts from construction, the draft
    EIS/EIR noted that the impacts will vary greatly depending upon location, with the
    greatest potential for impacts near stations, tunnel access portals, and construction
    laydown areas. It stated that construction noise impact was expected to be adverse.
    It also stated that that the equipment used for underground construction could
    generate vibration levels that could result in audible ground-borne noise levels in
    buildings at the surface, depending on the depth of the tunnel and soil conditions.
    But it noted there were no noise complaints during tunneling operations for the
    Metro Gold Line Eastside Extension, which used the same equipment that will be
    used for the Project. It recommended several measures to reduce the potential for
    noise and vibration impacts associated with construction of the Project.
    c.     Geologic Hazards
    In examining the geologic hazards, the draft EIS/EIR sought to determine,
    among other things, the location of active faults near the alignments and station
    locations. The draft EIS/EIR noted that active segments of the Santa Monica fault
    15
    would cross portions of all of the alternative alignments studied. The Geotechnical
    and Hazardous Materials Technical Report, which was circulated with and
    referenced in the draft EIS/EIR, also noted that “[b]ased on preliminary findings
    from an ongoing geophysical study by the project study team, the fourth fault
    strand of the Santa Monica fault appears to run subparallel to Santa Monica
    Boulevard from about Avenue of the Stars to Westwood Boulevard. . . . Mactec
    [Metro’s expert] will present the results of their fault study in a forthcoming
    addendum report.”
    The draft EIS/EIR also noted that the West Beverly Hills Lineament, which
    would cross the alignment in all of the alternatives in the vicinity of Moreno Drive
    and Santa Monica Boulevard in the Century City area, may be the surface
    manifestation of an active fault. It observed, however, that there was a dispute
    about the existence of the Lineament, and that further evaluation of the Lineament
    and its significance to the Project would be performed during design level
    investigations for the Project.
    d.     Evaluation of Century City Station and Alignment Options
    The draft EIS/EIR began its evaluation of the Century City station and
    alignment options by stating: “In this portion of the project, there are both station
    location options and alignment options. Decisions on the best location for a
    Century City station can be made first, based upon various factors discussed
    below. Once a station location is selected, alignment options connecting that
    station location with adjacent stations can be evaluated. Accordingly, this section
    begins by highlighting the differences between the two location options for a
    Century City station.”
    The draft EIS/EIR went on to state that the Santa Monica station location “is
    compromised by its close proximity to the Santa Monica fault. The optional
    16
    Constellation site is farther from the fault and would have a lower seismic risk.
    The Constellation site is also more centrally located within Century City,
    enhancing walk access for many passengers boarding and alighting at Century
    City.” The draft EIS/EIR noted that if the station were located at Constellation,
    there would be two alignment options for connecting to the Wilshire/Rodeo
    station, and that neither the alignment options nor the station location options
    would have a significant impact on transit travel time between Century City and
    the Wilshire/Rodeo station.
    D.    Comments on the Draft EIS/EIR
    The draft EIS/EIR was made available to interested parties, including
    residents, property owners, community groups, the business community, elected
    officials, and public agencies. Metro held five public hearings on the draft
    EIS/EIR, and received nearly 2,000 public and agency comments during the 45-
    day review and comment period. Many of the comments were related to the
    Century City station and alignment options.
    Several comments were received from School District and City, and/or their
    representatives, opposing any alternative alignment that would require building
    tunnels under the high school and residential properties.9 The comments expressed
    concerns regarding student and teacher safety during construction and operation of
    the subway, interference with School District’s plans to modernize the high school
    buildings, interference with the use of the high school as an emergency shelter and
    crisis center, and decreased value in homeowners’ properties.
    9
    Metro also received numerous comments from individuals, organizations, and
    governmental agencies in favor of locating the Century City station at Constellation
    Boulevard.
    17
    In addition, City noted that locating the Century City station at Constellation
    Boulevard would cost $6 million more than locating it at Santa Monica Boulevard,
    and questioned whether the Constellation station would result in significantly
    higher ridership than the Santa Monica station, since the Santa Monica station
    would provide a direct transit link to buses that operate along Santa Monica
    Boulevard. City also asserted, among other things, that additional analysis was
    necessary to determine the locations of the West Beverly Hills Lineament, the
    Santa Monica fault, and abandoned oil wells on the high school property, and that
    further study was needed of the potential noise and vibration impacts from
    operation of the subway under the high school and residences.
    In addition, City submitted a letter from Shannon & Wilson, Inc., geotechnical and
    environmental consultants, summarizing its review findings from its geotechnical
    engineering report, which criticized certain portions of the geotechnical analysis in
    the draft EIS/EIR and suggested further studies and analysis.
    E.    Actions After the Public Comment Period
    At a meeting of the Metro board of directors on October 28, 2010, after the
    public comment period for the draft EIS/EIR had expired, the Metro board
    identified Alternative 2 (the Westwood/VA Hospital Extension) as the LPA for
    further study in the final EIS/EIR. The board did not identify which Century City
    station option and alignment option would be included in the LPA. Instead, it
    directed that both the Santa Monica and Constellation station options, along with
    the Constellation North and the Santa Monica Boulevard alignment options, be
    carried forward for further study.
    The board approved a motion by Director Zev Yaroslavsky “that during
    Final EIS/EIR preparation, staff fully explore the risks associated with tunneling
    under the high school, including but not limited to the following: risk of
    18
    settlement, noise, vibration, risks from oil wells on the property, impact to use of
    the school as an emergency evacuation center, and overall risk to student, faculty
    and the community; and . . . [¶] that staff continue to work closely with the
    community and the City of Beverly Hills, and Century City and Westwood
    neighborhoods and provide them information from these analyses as soon as they
    become available.”10 The approved motion also “[d]irected staff to analyze the
    possibility of moving the subway tunnel in order to avoid all school buildings and
    avoid impacting any future plans to remodel Beverly Hills High School.” Finally,
    staff was directed to further investigate the nature and location of faults in the
    Century City area and their potential impact on station locations.
    1.     Metro’s Tunneling Safety Investigation
    Metro’s experts conducted a further study of the potential risks identified by
    the Metro board, and released the Century City Area Tunneling Safety Report in
    October 2011. The report expanded upon the discussions in the draft EIS/EIR
    concerning the risk of settlement caused by tunneling, noise and vibration
    associated with tunneling and operating subways under the high school, the risks
    from tunneling in gassy ground and near oil wells, the risks of tunneling through
    fault zones, and the impact of the tunnel on the use of the high school as an
    emergency evacuation center. The report concluded that (1) tunneling could be
    safely carried out beneath the high school campus and residential neighborhoods
    through the use of state of the art pressurized closed-face tunnel boring machines;
    (2) tunneling would not prevent future development of the high school campus
    10
    We note that the draft EIS/EIR had addressed the risk of settlement from tunneling
    generally in Appendix E, explaining that the tunnel construction method it would be
    using virtually eliminated that risk. The draft EIS/EIR also addressed oil wells generally,
    and noted that the presence of oil wells is not considered a hazard.
    19
    because the crown of the tunnels has been set at 55 to 70 feet below the ground
    surface; (3) tunneling would not impact the use of the high school campus as an
    emergency evacuation center; (4) tunneling through fault zones can be done safely
    through the use of tools, designs, and construction methods that have been used
    elsewhere; (5) although tunnel construction may cause some low levels of noise
    and vibration for a day or two, vibration and noise levels during operation of the
    subway will be within the FTA requirements; (6) prior experience shows that
    tunneling through gassy ground can be done safely; and (7) tunnels have been
    safely constructed through oil well fields with no adverse incidents, and there will
    be procedures in place to locate and safely remove and re-abandon any oil wells
    encountered during tunneling.
    The report also addressed the Metro board’s directive to analyze the
    possibility of moving the alignment to avoid all buildings on the high school
    campus. It noted that relatively large radius curves are needed both to construct
    the tunnel using tunnel boring machines, and to allow for sufficient train operating
    speeds, and there must be a tangent (straight) section of the tunnel going into and
    out of stations. It explained that during the ACE phase (part of the draft EIS/EIR
    phase), alignment studies were undertaken to minimize the length of the tunnel
    under buildings on the high school campus. The alignment presented in the draft
    EIS/EIR presented a longer tangent section into the Constellation station but would
    run directly under Building B of the high school. An alignment studied in the ACE
    phase avoided tunneling under the two-story portion of Building B, but was closer
    to the high school’s historic swimming pool building and required tighter curves.
    The report stated that the alignment to be presented in the final EIS/EIR presents
    smoother curves in the high school area, eliminates the influence on the swimming
    pool building, and passes beneath the south part of Building B, which the report
    20
    concluded provides the optimal layout for train operations and impacts on the high
    school buildings.
    2.     Metro’s Fault Investigation
    During the early planning stages of the Project, Metro relied upon available
    published information (including the most recent geologic maps published by the
    California Geologic Survey) regarding the Santa Monica fault zone and the West
    Beverly Hills Lineament. That information indicated that the Santa Monica fault
    runs approximately parallel to Santa Monica Boulevard in the Century City area,
    north of the Boulevard. During the draft EIS/EIR and ACE phase, geotechnical
    fault studies were performed at two locations in Century City. Those studies
    indicated that the Santa Monica fault zone includes strands that are farther south
    than previously mapped, and therefore the proposed Santa Monica station could be
    within the fault zone. Thus, the draft EIS/EIR noted that the Santa Monica station
    location “is compromised by its close proximity to the Santa Monica Fault which
    runs directly beneath Santa Monica Boulevard in this area.”
    Metro conducted additional studies during the final EIS/EIR and PE phase to
    more precisely locate the Santa Monica fault zone. In addition, because there had
    never been a subsurface investigation to determine the exact location of the West
    Beverly Hills Lineament (which was suspected by some to be a fault), or whether it
    was an active fault, Metro conducted additional studies to make those
    determinations.11
    11
    Metro was assisted in its studies by two consulting earthquake geologists, Dr.
    James Dolan and Dr. Thomas Rockwell, and a consulting seismic geophysicist, Dr.
    Thomas Henyey. Dr. Dolan is a professor of Earth Sciences at the University of
    Southern California specializing in the mapping and analysis of active faults and seismic
    hazards, and is a widely acknowledged expert on the faults and seismic hazards of the
    Los Angeles region. Dr. Rockwell is a professor in the Department of Geological
    21
    In the spring of 2011, Metro conducted geophysical and drilling studies that
    confirmed the presence of the Santa Monica fault zone crossing Santa Monica
    Boulevard at approximately Avenue of the Stars, i.e., the location of the Santa
    Monica station, rendering that station not viable for a public transit station. To
    avoid locating the station within the fault zone, Metro shifted the Santa Monica
    station to the east, at Santa Monica Boulevard and Century Park East (the Santa
    Monica East station) to allow for continued study of a station on Santa Monica
    Boulevard. However, Metro’s studies of the West Beverly Hills Lineament
    indicated that it crosses through the Santa Monica East station location and appears
    to be the northward extension of the Newport-Inglewood fault system, and thus
    must be considered an active fault. Therefore, Metro determined that that location
    also was not suitable for a public transit station. Metro’s studies also found that
    the Constellation station location is outside the zones of active faulting and
    therefore could be considered a viable option.
    Metro’s studies were presented in the Century City Fault Investigation
    Report, which was made available to the public in October 2011 (a revised report
    was issued in November 2011).
    Sciences at San Diego State University, and is an expert on the tectonics and earthquake
    hazards of southern California and Baja California, having served as Geology Group
    Leader for the Southern California Earthquake Center for many years. Dr. Henyey is
    Professor Emeritus of Earth Sciences at the University of Southern California, and was
    Director of the Southern California Earthquake Center for 11 years.
    22
    3.     Metro Tunnel Advisory Panel and Independent Review Panel Reports
    Metro’s tunneling safety and fault investigation reports were reviewed and
    evaluated by the Metro Tunnel Advisory Panel (TAP)12 and the Independent
    Review Panel.13
    TAP issued a summary report based on its own evaluations and its review of
    the tunneling safety and fault investigation reports. TAP concluded that (1) both
    the Santa Monica station and the Santa Monica East station locations are within
    12
    The members of TAP were Dr. Edward Cording, a Professor Emeritus of Civil and
    Environmental Engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, who
    developed criteria used world-wide for evaluating the effect of excavation and tunneling
    on surface structures and has been engaged in the planning, design, and construction of
    major underground transit projects in several cities, including San Francisco and San
    Jose; Dr. Geoffrey Martin, a Professor Emeritus of Civil Engineering at the University of
    Southern California, who is internationally recognized for his expertise in the field of
    geotechnical and earthquake engineering; and Dr. Harvey Parker, an independent tunnel
    consultant with over 45 years of engineering experience, who has consulted on design
    and/or construction aspects of transit systems in numerous major cities and was former
    President of the International Tunneling and Underground Space Association, former
    Chair of the U.S. National Committee on Tunneling Technology, and former Chair of the
    Underground Technology Research Council.
    13
    The members of the Independent Review Panel were Lloyd Cluff, the former
    Director of the Geosciences Department for Pacific Gas and Electric Company, where he
    managed earthquake risks for all of the company’s facilities, and former Chairman of the
    Scientific Earthquake Studies Advisory Committee for the U.S. Department of the
    Interior and of the Earthquake Engineering Research Institute; Dr. Paul Jennings, a
    Professor Emeritus of Civil Engineering and Applied Mechanics at Caltech, who is a
    former president of the Seismological Society of America and of the Earthquake
    Engineering Research Institute; Dr. Lucile Jones, a research seismologist with the U.S.
    Geological Survey for more than 30 years, who served on the California Seismic Safety
    Commission and is a member of the California Earthquake Prediction Evaluation
    Council; and Professor Thomas O’Rourke, the Thomas R. Briggs Professor of
    Engineering, School of Civil & Environmental Engineering at Cornell University, who
    has authored or co-authored more than 340 publications on geotechnical, underground,
    earthquake engineering, and the impact of extreme events on civil infrastructure, and is
    an elected member of the U.S. National Academy of Engineering and a member of the
    board of directors and former President of the Earthquake Engineering Research Institute.
    23
    active fault zones and are not acceptable sites for a station; (2) the Constellation
    station location is not in an active fault zone; (3) tunneling across the Santa Monica
    fault zone and the West Beverly Hills Lineament can be safely accomplished; (4) it
    is safe to tunnel under the high school and residences using the design and
    tunneling procedures outlined in the TAP report; (5) the presence of a tunnel under
    the high school will not prevent the high school from being used as an emergency
    center, nor will it prevent the high school from building new facilities over the
    tunnel; and (6) noise and vibration will be controlled and, if necessary, mitigated
    during construction and operations.
    The Independent Review Panel found Metro’s tunneling safety and fault
    investigation reports to be “highly professional and technically sound.” It found
    that the conclusions in those reports were “valid and convincing, based on the high
    quality data assembled about active faults in the Century City area, the analyses of
    those data, and the quality and comprehensiveness of the information summarized
    regarding tunneling.” The Panel stated that its findings were “based on a careful
    review of the data as well as detailed and candid discussions with Metro staff,
    project designers, geoscience experts engaged in the fault investigations, and
    [TAP].”
    4.     School District’s and City’s Expert Reports
    In response to Metro’s tunneling safety and fault investigation reports, City
    and School District hired their own experts to review the Metro reports and/or
    conduct their own hazard assessment studies.
    Shannon & Wilson, Inc., a geotechnical and environmental consultant firm
    hired by City, issued its report presenting the results of its review of the Metro
    reports on March 8, 2012. It “generally agree[d] that placing a station along the
    Santa Monica Boulevard alignment will be more risky than at Constellation
    24
    Boulevard” due to the likelihood of faults along the Santa Monica fault zone.
    However, it stated that the West Beverly Hills Lineament “may not be considered
    active,” and recommended that further studies be conducted to determine whether
    the faults along Santa Monica Boulevard really are active and whether a station
    could be located somewhere along the Boulevard. It also stated that Metro’s
    conclusion that the Constellation station location is not within a fault zone “is
    premature” because that location was not as thoroughly studied as the Santa
    Monica station location.
    With regard to the safety of tunneling under the high school, Shannon &
    Wilson stated that “the conclusions that construction of tunnels, using state-of-the-
    practice closed-face Tunnel Boring Machines (TBMs) can result in negligible to
    minor settlements, and little to no impacts from gas, groundwater, and soil
    variability is a generally realistic assessment.” Shannon & Wilson also agreed
    with Metro that the tunnel would not impact the high school’s ability to construct
    other structures on the campus.
    Another company hired by City to evaluate Metro’s tunnel safety and fault
    investigation reports, Exponent Failure Analysis Associates (Exponent), issued its
    report in February 2012. Generally, Exponent criticized Metro’s reports for failing
    to quantify or qualitatively assess the potential risks from the hazards identified in
    the reports. It then identified specific hazards, such as fault rupture hazard, gas
    hazard, and potential damage to buildings during tunneling, and suggested future
    steps that should or could be taken to properly assess the potential risks involved.
    It concluded that more studies and analysis were needed to accurately identify,
    quantify, rank, and mitigate the potential hazards posed by the Project before the
    appropriate station location could be determined.
    Leighton Consulting, Inc., which School District hired to conduct an
    assessment of possible fault presence and activity at the high school, issued a
    25
    report in April 2012. Since Leighton’s focus was on active faults beneath the high
    school campus, the report did not address whether the West Beverly Hills
    Lineament is active beneath the Santa Monica station or Santa Monica East station
    locations. It concluded, however, that “no active faults associated with the [West
    Beverly Hills Lineament] are present on the campus of [the high school],
    associated buildings and nearby district structures.”
    F.    Release and Certification of Final EIS/EIR
    Metro released the final EIS/EIR in March 2012. Although the EIS/EIR did
    not address the Shannon & Wilson and Exponent reports, which had been issued
    before the release of the EIS/EIR (or the Leighton report, which was issued after
    the release of the EIS/EIR), it did respond to each of the comments Metro received
    on the draft EIS/EIR, including City’s and School District’s comments. The final
    EIS/EIR also included several appendices (including one containing Metro’s Fault
    Investigation Report and Tunneling Safety Report), along with multiple technical
    reports.
    1.     Evaluation of the Century City Station Location and Alignment
    With regard to the Century City station location, the EIS/EIR explained that
    Metro conducted further studies during preparation of the final EIS/EIR to address
    concerns raised by the community. It stated that Metro conducted further
    geotechnical studies to provide additional information about the Santa Monica
    fault in Century City, and determined that the original Santa Monica station would
    be located within the active fault zone. Therefore, that location no longer could be
    considered an option, and the location was shifted to the east (the Santa Monica
    East station) for evaluation in the final EIS/EIR. Further geotechnical studies were
    conducted, which concluded that the West Beverly Hills Lineament also was an
    26
    active fault zone (the Newport-Inglewood fault zone), and that the Santa Monica
    East station would straddle that fault zone. Despite this conclusion, the EIS/EIR
    evaluated the environmental impacts of locating the station at this location,
    although it noted that “following a hard look in this environmental review process,
    the location is no longer considered a viable option because of its position on the
    Newport-Inglewood fault zone.”
    Comparing the impacts of the Santa Monica East station to the Constellation
    station, the final EIS/EIR found that the alignment serving the Constellation station
    would be about one-quarter mile longer than an alignment serving the Santa
    Monica East station, which would add between 23 and 27 seconds of travel time.
    But it found that this slight increase in travel time would be compensated for by the
    fact that the Constellation station would be more centrally located within Century
    City, making it more convenient for potential transit riders in the area. It also
    predicted, based upon the regional travel demand forecasting model, that there
    would be more than 3,000 additional daily boardings at the Constellation station
    than at the Santa Monica East station. With regard to property easements, the
    EIS/EIR noted that the alignment for the Constellation station would require
    tunneling beneath between 14 and 44 more properties than the alignment for the
    Santa Monica Station. The EIS/EIR also noted that there would be less traffic
    impacts during construction of the Constellation station because Constellation
    Boulevard carries one-fifth the traffic volume of Santa Monica Boulevard and
    operates at a better level of service. Finally, the EIS/EIR observed that, unlike the
    Santa Monica East station location, the Constellation station location is in an area
    showing no evidence of faulting. Based upon this analysis, the final EIS/EIR
    recommended that the Century City station be located at the Constellation station
    location.
    27
    2.      Discussion of Air Quality Construction Impacts
    The final EIS/EIR stated that its assessment of the air quality construction
    impacts used factors from the California Air Resources Board’s Urban Emissions
    Model, a Road Construction Emissions Model developed by the Sacramento
    Metropolitan Air Quality Management District, and SCAQMD’s OFFROAD 2007
    emission factors. The EIS/EIR set forth estimated daily construction emissions for
    each construction element, along with the estimated daily construction emissions
    for the entire Project, assuming that each emission source will occur during the
    same peak period.14 It showed that, under the concurrent construction scenario,
    SCAQMD thresholds will be exceeded for all pollutants when the total emissions
    over the duration of the construction period are accounted for. It explained that
    this is due to the accelerated schedule that was developed to minimize the
    disturbances that construction would bring to the residents and businesses in the
    construction area. Under the phased construction model, SCAQMD thresholds
    will be exceeded for all pollutants under phase 2 and phase 3, and for all pollutants
    except carbon monoxide in phase 1, due to the magnitude of the Project and the
    schedule that was developed to minimize the disturbances to residents and
    businesses.
    The EIS/EIR recommended several mitigation measures to reduce the air
    quality emission impacts. It noted that these measures will help reduce impacts,
    but it is unlikely under the current construction plan that the emission levels
    (especially for nitrous oxides) will be below the SCAQMD threshold during
    construction, and therefore adverse effects will remain after mitigation. The
    14
    The Project could be constructed as a single phase under the “America Fast
    Forward (30/10) Scenario” (concurrent construction) or as three consecutive phases under
    the “Metro Long Range Transportation Plan (LRTP) Scenario” (phased construction).
    The air quality assessment was done for both construction scenarios.
    28
    EIS/EIR also recommended mitigation measures to reduce the air quality
    particulate matter impacts, and stated that with those measures it is predicted that
    particulate levels at each site will be below the SCAQMD threshold and will not
    result in adverse effects.
    3.     Metro’s Responses to City’s and School District’s Reports
    Although Metro did not address City’s and School District’s reports in the
    final EIS/EIR, it issued detailed written responses to each of the reports provided
    by City and School District.
    a.     Shannon & Wilson Report
    Metro issued its response to the Shannon & Wilson report on April 17, 2012.
    Metro noted that Shannon & Wilson agreed with Metro that it is not appropriate to
    construct a subway station within an active fault zone, and that there may be active
    faults along Santa Monica Boulevard between the main identified traces of the
    Santa Monica fault zone and the West Beverly Hills Lineament. Metro agreed
    with Shannon & Wilson’s conclusion that additional trenching would be necessary
    to conclusively determine whether there is active faulting along Santa Monica
    Boulevard in the Santa Monica fault zone and the West Beverly Hills Lineament.
    But it observed that, to rule out active faults, there would have to be continuous
    trenching through undisturbed, Holocene age, native sediments all along Santa
    Monica Boulevard, which was not feasible because the area has been densely
    developed and the sediments necessary to make the active fault determination have
    been largely removed by utility construction.
    With regard to Shannon & Wilson’s criticism that Metro’s studies of the
    Constellation station location were not as thorough as its studies of the Santa
    Monica station location, Metro responded that a more thorough “level of fault
    29
    investigation is done only when there is earlier information suggesting the likely
    presence of active faulting. Active faults do not just occur anywhere. They are
    localized into discrete zones that are readily identifiable from characteristic
    deformation features prominent in the landscape.” Metro noted that unlike the
    deformation features along Santa Monica Boulevard, “the site of the Constellation
    Station exhibits no topographic evidence for active faulting.” Nevertheless, Metro
    did analyze the subsurface structure of the area surrounding the Constellation
    station location, including examining: historical data, including historic aerial
    photographs, topographic maps, and geologic maps; data from previous
    geotechnical investigations in Century City, which has been extensively
    investigated for development of other nearby properties; and new borings,
    observation wells, and cone penetration tests conducted specifically for Metro.
    b.     Exponent Report
    Metro issued its response to the Exponent report on April 4, 2012. Metro
    stated that it “disagrees with Exponent’s opinions and finds serious flaws in the
    conclusions drawn from its investigative approach. In a number of cases,
    Exponent does not acknowledge or is unaware of information and analyses that
    Metro conducted. Moreover, Exponent’s opinions frequently reflect a lack of
    familiarity with and expertise in underground construction and fault investigation,
    and are unsupported by facts.” Metro then addressed in detail each of Exponent’s
    criticisms and suggestions, explaining why the criticism or suggestion was
    unjustified, based upon incorrect information, or infeasible.
    c.     Leighton Report
    Metro issued its response to the Leighton report on May 14, 2012. It
    observed that “[t]he Leighton investigation provides welcome new data to help
    30
    constrain the location of identified faults within the [West Beverly Hills
    Lineament], beneath and adjacent to [the high school]. However, there is nothing
    in the Leighton report data that contradict Metro’s conclusion that there is no safe
    location to site a station on Santa Monica Boulevard in Century City.” Metro
    provided a more detailed response to each of Leighton’s comments and
    conclusions, and concluded that the new Leighton data, combined with previously
    collected data, confirms the presence of faulting through the Santa Monica East
    station location. And, since it is impossible to confirm that all of the faults that
    Metro has identified along the Lineament are inactive (due to the presence of
    subsurface infrastructure such as storm drains, water mains, and gas, sewer, and
    electric lines), Metro observed that the Leighton report does not affect Metro’s
    conclusion that a station on Santa Monica Boulevard is not viable.
    4.     Approval of Phase 1
    The Metro board was scheduled to approve the Project, certify the EIS/EIR,
    and adopt CEQA findings at its regular meeting on April 26, 2012. Three days
    before the scheduled meeting, however, City requested a hearing under Public
    Utilities Code section 30639 (a transit hearing) regarding the location of the
    Century City station. (See discussion, § G, post.) Therefore, at the April 26 board
    meeting, the Metro board approved and adopted CEQA findings only as to Phase 1
    of the Project (to La Cienega Boulevard), and deferred action on Phase 2 (which
    includes Century City) and Phase 3 until after the transit hearing. The board did,
    however, certify the EIS/EIR at that meeting.
    G.    Request For, and Conduct of, Transit Hearing
    As noted, on April 23, 2012 -- three days before the Metro board meeting --
    City transmitted to Metro a resolution adopted by the Beverly Hills City Council
    31
    requesting a transit hearing regarding Metro’s proposal to fix the location of a
    subway station facility at Constellation Boulevard and to fix the location of the
    related alignment beneath the high school. The resolution stated:
    “Section 1. California Public Utilities Code Section 30639 provides that any
    city within the territorial jurisdiction of the Los Angeles County Metropolitan
    Transportation Authority may request a hearing before the Board of the Authority
    concerning any proposal by the Authority to fix the location of facilities.
    “Section 2. The City of Beverly Hills has expressed its emphatic opposition
    to the proposal to locate a subway station facility at Constellation Boulevard in
    Century City because such a location includes a proposed subway tunnel alignment
    beneath Beverly Hills High School.
    “Section 3. Important information concerning the impacts of the proposed
    location of the subway station and alignment, and alternatives to the proposed
    station and/or alignment location that would avoid impacts to Beverly Hills High
    School, have not been fully analyzed or discussed before the Board of the
    Metropolitan Transportation Authority.
    “Section 4. The City Council of the City of Beverly Hills believes that the
    City, the public and the Board of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority would
    benefit from a full hearing regarding these subjects before any further decision is
    made concerning the Westside subway extension.
    “Section 5. Pursuant to Public Utilities Code Section 30639, the City
    Council of the City of Beverly Hills hereby requests a hearing before the Board of
    the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority regarding the
    proposal to fix the location of a subway station facility at Constellation Boulevard
    in Century City and the proposal to fix the location of the related subway tunnel
    alignment beneath Beverly Hills High School.”
    32
    Metro set a special meeting of the board on May 17, 2012 to hold the transit
    hearing. Although City requested that Metro continue the hearing for a few days
    because two of its witnesses were unavailable on that date, Metro explained that it
    could not accommodate City’s request because “it is not possible to convene a
    meeting of a majority of the members of the MTA Board on a date other than May
    17, 2012, and still be able to proceed to the Board’s next regular meeting
    scheduled for May 24, 2012,” at which the Board would vote on the outcome of
    the transit hearing.
    At the start of the hearing on May 17, Metro’s board chair, Antonio
    Villaraigosa, noted that the hearing was scheduled to take place between 1:30 p.m.
    and 5:00 p.m., and would be adjourned at 5:00 p.m. He explained that “[t]he
    purpose of this hearing is not to determine the best location for the Century City
    station of the Westside Subway Extension Project. Rather, the sole purpose of this
    hearing is to give the City of Beverly Hills and the Metropolitan Transit Authority
    an opportunity to present evidence in the form of testimony and/or exhibits
    regarding the reasonableness of the proposed Constellation station and tunnel
    alignment under Beverly Hills High School.” Chair Villaraigosa then turned the
    hearing over to the hearing officer, a local attorney unaffiliated with Metro, to
    conduct the hearing.
    After introducing himself and explaining that his role was simply to
    facilitate the hearing, the hearing officer turned to the City Attorney for City and
    the Assistant County Counsel representing Metro and stated: “Mr. Wiener and Mr.
    Safer, let me first start by asking how you want to proceed. Should we have
    [Metro] simply submit its evidence and its proposal and then have [City] proceed?
    That seems to me to be the logical way to do it. And that basically gives [City] a
    maximum amount of time to make its presentation.” The City Attorney for City
    responded, “We are fine with that. Thank you.” Metro then submitted its
    33
    evidence, which was a collection of CDs that contained the final EIS/EIR, and
    various reports related to the Century City station. After the City Attorney stated
    that City just received the CDs and did not know their contents, Metro’s counsel
    read a list of the contents and stated that most of the documents had been public for
    some time, and all of them were available online.15 The hearing officer then turned
    the floor over to City for its presentation.
    The City Attorney began by telling the Metro board that it did not yet have
    the information necessary to make a fully informed decision about the Century
    City station location and alignment. He explained that “we are here to provide you
    with information that will allow you to make a choice that does not involve
    tunneling underneath Beverly Hills High School.” City (through one of its retained
    attorneys) then presented six expert witnesses to testify about geotechnical and
    other technical data.
    The first witness was Philip Buchiarelli, a principal geologist with Leighton
    Consulting, the firm hired by School District to conduct a fault investigation of the
    high school. Buchiarelli testified about the results of the investigation, and spent
    15
    In addition to the final EIS/EIR, the CDs contained the December 2011
    Preliminary Geotechnical Environmental Report; the February 2012 Century City T.O.D
    (transit oriented development) and Walk Access Study; the November 2011 Century City
    Fault Investigation and Tunneling Safety Reports; the February 2011 Building and
    Adjacent Structure Protection Report; City’s Shannon & Wilson report; Metro’s response
    to School District’s Leighton report; the October 2011 Century City Area Tunnel Safety
    and Fault Investigations report; Metro’s response to City’s Exponent report; Metro’s
    response to City’s Shannon & Wilson report; the October 2011 Independent Review
    Panel’s report; videos of the October 19, 2011 Metro Planning and Programming
    Committee meeting; Metro’s response to comments made by Prime Source Consulting
    and Hillsborough Referral at the April 18, 2012 Metro Planning and Programming
    Committee meeting; and Metro’s reply to Exponent’s responses to Metro’s response to
    Exponent’s report.
    34
    the remainder of his testimony detailing his criticisms of Metro’s written response
    to the Leighton report.
    The next witness was an engineering geologist, Eldon Gath, who assisted in
    the Leighton investigation. Gath’s testimony focused entirely upon Metro’s
    response to the Leighton report.
    The third witness, Miles Kenney, was a geologist who evaluated the various
    subsurface studies done in the Century City area, i.e., Metro’s fault investigation
    reports and the Leighton report, and testified as to his interpretation of the data.
    The fourth witness, Roy Shlemon, was not available on the day of the
    hearing, and gave his testimony by video; the video was admitted as an exhibit.
    Shlemon, a consulting geologist, prepared a report for Shannon & Wilson based
    upon his review of Metro’s original geological report for the Project. He testified
    that in his opinion, there was not enough geological investigation of the
    Constellation station site, and that more needed to be done to rule out faulting at
    that location.
    The fifth witness was Tim Buresh, an engineer with experience building
    schools and subways. In his testimony, Buresh criticized the ridership model and
    ridership studies, cost estimates, and seismic studies Metro relied upon in the
    EIS/EIR, and challenged Metro’s conclusion that tunneling under the high school
    would not impact School District’s ability to construct new facilities on the high
    school campus.
    The final witness was Subodh Medhekar, a chemical engineer specializing in
    risk and liability assessments, who assisted in the preparation of the Exponent
    report as well as a report responding to Metro’s response to the Exponent report.
    In his testimony, Medhekar criticized Metro’s failure to perform a risk assessment
    on the Century City station options, discussed his criticisms of Metro’s written
    response to the Exponent report, and explained what additional studies would be
    35
    needed to properly evaluate the risks involved in locating a station at the
    Constellation site.
    Following the presentation of witnesses, City’s retained counsel submitted a
    document regarding potential alignments that were not discussed and evaluated in
    the EIS/EIR. Explaining the purpose of this document, counsel stated: “We have
    throughout this hearing -- and we appreciate your time and attention to it --
    attempted to make the point not that we think there should be a Santa Monica
    station or that there should be a Constellation station or one is better than the other
    or so on and so forth. [¶] We’re not even attempting to argue that decision with
    you at this point. What we are simply saying is it is clear that there has not been
    sufficient investigation and not enough facts for you as a board to make that choice
    at this point. [¶] You may have thoughts about it, et cetera, but you don’t have
    sufficient data. And we’ve had numerous experts explain to you why that
    investigation has been incomplete, what should be done to answer those questions,
    and so on and so forth.” Counsel then went through the document and discussed
    various potential alignments that would not require tunneling under the high
    school.
    In City’s closing statement, the City Attorney urged the board not to make
    any decision on the station location or alignment at that time: “As I said at the
    beginning, I believe we still have choices. I believe that it is unreasonable to
    choose a Constellation Boulevard station and an alignment under Beverly Hills
    High School while you still have information that you need to make an informed
    decision. [¶] And that is what needs to be done. . . . If the information that has
    been presented to you today is not satisfactory, we should be looking for definitive
    information regarding whether or not there is an active fault under Santa Monica
    Boulevard and whether or not one of the alternative routes that we have suggested
    could reach Constellation Boulevard and avoid Beverly Hills High School and
    36
    perhaps even avoid the issue of whether or not there is a seismic risk to putting a
    station at Santa Monica Boulevard. [¶] We implore you to take the time because
    you have the time to make the right choice.”
    Following a brief exchange between Director Antonovich and the Chief
    Executive Officer of Metro, the hearing officer stated, “That’s going to conclude
    the hearing,” and the proceedings were adjourned.
    H.    Adoption of Findings for Transit Hearing and Final Approval and
    Recertification of EIS/EIR
    At the start of regular Metro board meeting held on May 24, 2012, Director
    Yaroslavsky noted that the board would begin with the continuation of the public
    hearing held the previous Thursday (May 17), to allow those people who had
    signed up at that meeting to provide their comments.16 After all those who signed
    up on May 17 had given their comments, Chair Villaraigosa declared that “this
    public comment period for the subway special Board Meeting is closed.” The
    board secretary then called the roll for the regular board meeting. After the board
    voted to approve the consent calendar, it moved on to item 58 on the non-consent
    calendar agenda. Item 58 was to consider adopting the staff recommended
    decision with findings on the transit hearing.
    Taking up agenda item 58, Director Yaroslavsky indicated that the board
    would first hear from the staff and a group of Metro’s experts. The director of
    planning for the Project stated that they were going to present the findings from the
    transit hearing, noting that most of the findings related to seismic and geotechnical
    16
    Under the Ralph M. Brown Act (Gov. Code, § 54950 et seq.), Metro is required to
    provide an opportunity for members of the public to directly address the Metro board on
    any item being considered at a special meeting, before or during consideration of that
    item. (Gov. Code, § 54954.3, subd. (a).)
    37
    issues. He then introduced three of Metro’s experts, James Dolan (one of Metro’s
    consulting geologists), Harvey Parker (a member of TAP), and Lucy Jones (a
    member of the Independent Review Panel) to give presentations to the board. In
    their presentations, Dolan and Parker responded to some of the issues raised by
    City’s experts at the transit hearing, and Jones (who explained that she was serving
    as a representative of the federal government), concurred with everything Dolan
    and Parker told the board. Following Dolan and Parker’s presentations, Metro
    staff members provided a response to questions Director Antonovich had raised
    regarding developing property above Metro’s tunnel easements, addressed the
    alternate alignments City raised at the transit hearing, and responded to questions
    from Director Yaroslavsky about another issue raised at the transit hearing.
    Before voting on the staff recommendation for agenda item 58, the board
    opened the floor for public comment on the recommendation. Following the
    public comment, the board voted, and adopted the decision and findings for the
    transit hearing.
    The board then moved on to agenda item 59, which was to consider
    approving phases 2 and 3 of the Project and adopting the findings of fact and
    statement of overriding considerations in accordance with CEQA. As part of the
    approval, the board would recertify the final EIS/EIR, which included an
    addendum that updated the air quality analysis.17 After hearing public comment,
    the board voted to approve phases 2 and 3, adopted the findings of fact and
    statement of overriding considerations, and recertified the EIS/EIR.
    17
    It appears that the addendum was presented to the public at or shortly before the
    May 24, 2012 board meeting.
    38
    I.    Trial Court Proceedings
    On May 30, 2012, School District and City filed separate petitions for writ
    of mandate. The cases were ordered related for purposes of briefing, trial, and
    decision.
    School District’s petition alleged that Metro failed to comply with the
    California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) because (1) the Project description
    changed from the draft environmental impact statement/environmental impact
    report (the EIS/EIR) to the final EIS/EIR; (2) Metro’s analysis of seismic impacts
    was inadequate in the final EIS/EIR because it did not include information
    gathered and analyses conducted by experts hired by School District; (3) the final
    EIS/EIR contained significant new information that was not included in the draft
    EIS/EIR, and therefore Metro was required, but failed, to prepare and recirculate a
    supplemental draft EIS/EIR for public comment; (4) Metro’s analysis of the
    impacts of the Constellation station was inadequate; (5) Metro failed to conduct a
    comparative risk assessment of the Constellation station and the Santa Monica or
    Santa Monica East stations; and (6) Metro’s addendum to the final EIS/EIR, which
    made changes to the air quality impact section, was improper.
    City’s first amended petition alleged that Metro violated CEQA by
    (1) failing to recirculate the EIS/EIR; (2) failing to include a clear and stable
    project description; (3) failing to analyze the potential impacts associated with the
    Constellation station; (4) failing to analyze a reasonable range of alternatives;
    (5) failing to properly describe the baseline physical conditions, analyze significant
    impacts, adopt feasible mitigation measures or alternatives, and support its
    conclusions with substantial evidence; (6) pre-committing to Project approval;
    (7) failing to support its findings and statement of overriding considerations with
    substantial evidence; and (8) approving the transit hearing decision and findings
    without first analyzing the environmental impacts of that decision and findings.
    39
    City also alleged that Metro violated Public Utilities Code sections 30639 et seq.
    by (1) setting a hearing date without consulting City, and without any action or
    meeting by Metro’s board; (2) refusing City’s request for a continuance of the
    hearing; (3) failing to have a quorum of board members present at all times during
    the transit hearing; (4) failing to present Metro’s expert witnesses at the transit
    hearing to allow City to cross-examine them; (5) closing the transit hearing and
    then presenting Metro’s expert witnesses during the public comment period; and
    (6) allowing board members who did not attend the transit hearing to vote to adopt
    the decision and findings. Finally, City alleged that the Metro board prejudicially
    abused its discretion by issuing the decision not supported by the findings and by
    adopting findings that are not supported by the evidence presented at the transit
    hearing.
    Following briefing and several days of argument, the trial court denied both
    petitions and issued a detailed statement of decision. Judgments denying School
    District’s and City’s petitions for writ of mandate were entered on April 30, 2014
    and May 20, 2014, respectively. School District and City each timely filed notices
    of appeal. We ordered the appeals consolidated for the purposes of filing the
    administrative record, oral argument, and decision.
    DISCUSSION
    In its appeal, School District contends that Metro abused its discretion by
    refusing to recirculate for public comment a new draft EIS/EIR because the final
    EIS/EIR contained significant new information regarding seismic risks and
    environmental issues arising from tunneling under the high school, which formed
    the basis for Metro’s decision to choose the Constellation station location and
    alignment. City, in its appeal, joins in School District’s argument, and also
    contends that Metro abused its discretion by refusing to recirculate because the
    40
    final EIS/EIR included new air quality impact information. In addition, City
    contends Metro violated CEQA because the EIS/EIR did not analyze localized air
    quality impacts or the public health impacts of the construction. City also raises
    several contentions regarding the transit hearing. First, it contends the transit
    hearing was a sham because Metro had already adopted findings of fact covering
    the entire Project at its April 26, 2012 board meeting. Second, City contends
    Metro violated the statutory requirements governing the transit hearing by
    preventing City from cross examining Metro’s experts and submitting rebuttal
    evidence in response to those experts’ testimony. Third, City contends that
    Metro’s decision and findings from the transit hearing are not supported by
    substantial evidence because Metro relied entirely upon uncorroborated hearsay.
    Finally, City contends that Metro deprived it of a “fair hearing” in violation of
    Code of Civil Procedure section 1094.5.
    We begin with the CEQA issues raised by both appellants, then address the
    issues regarding the transit hearing raised by City.
    A.    CEQA Issues
    As many courts have observed, the EIR is the “heart of CEQA.” (See, e.g.,
    Laurel Heights Improvement Assn. v. Regents of University of California (1993) 
    6 Cal. 4th 1112
    , 1123 (Laurel Heights II); Citizens of Goleta Valley v. Board of
    Supervisors (1990) 
    52 Cal. 3d 553
    , 564; Laurel Heights Improvement Assn. v.
    Regents of University of California (1988) 
    47 Cal. 3d 376
    , 392 (Laurel Heights I);
    see also Guidelines, § 15003, subd. (a).)18 “‘Its purpose is to inform the public and
    its responsible officials of the environmental consequences of their decisions
    18
    All references to “Guidelines” are to the state CEQA Guidelines, which implement
    CEQA. (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 14, § 15000 et seq.)
    41
    before they are made. Thus, the EIR “protects not only the environment but also
    informed self-government.” [Citation.]’ [Citation.] To this end, public
    participation is an ‘essential part of the CEQA process.’ [Citations.]” (Laurel
    Heights 
    II, supra
    , 6 Cal.4th at p. 1123.)
    An EIR must include a detailed statement setting forth “[a]ll significant
    effects on the environment of the proposed project,” as well as mitigation measures
    proposed to minimize significant effects on the environment, alternatives to the
    proposed projects, and a statement indicating the reasons for determining that
    various effects on the environment are not significant and therefore are not
    discussed in detail. (Pub. Resources Code, § 21100, subds. (b), (c).) It must
    “present information in such a manner that the foreseeable impacts of pursuing the
    project can actually be understood and weighed, and the public must be given an
    adequate opportunity to comment on that presentation before the decision to go
    forward is made.” (Vineyard Area Citizens for Responsible Growth, Inc. v. City of
    Rancho Cordova (2007) 
    40 Cal. 4th 412
    , 449-450 (Vineyard).)
    “When an EIR is required, the lead agency initially prepares a draft EIR.
    Once the draft EIR is completed, a comment period is provided for the public and
    interested agencies. ([Pub. Resources Code,] §§ 21091, 21092.2, 21104, 21153;
    Guidelines, §§ 15085, 15086, 15087.) Public hearings to discuss the draft EIR are
    encouraged, but not required. . . . [¶] In the course of preparing a final EIR, the
    lead agency must evaluate and respond to comments relating to significant
    environmental issues. [Citations.] In particular, the lead agency must explain in
    detail its reasons for rejecting suggestions and proceeding with the project despite
    its environmental effects. [Citation.] . . . Thus, it is plain that the final EIR will
    almost always contain information not included in the draft EIR. [¶] The final
    substantive step in the EIR review process is certification of the final EIR. The
    lead agency is required to certify that the final EIR has been completed in
    42
    compliance with CEQA, and that it reviewed and considered the information in the
    final EIR prior to approving the project. . . . [¶] If the lead agency adds
    ‘significant new information’ to the EIR subsequent to the close of the public
    comment period but prior to certification of the final EIR, CEQA requires that the
    lead agency provide a new public comment period. ([Pub. Resources Code,]
    § 21092.1)”19 (Laurel Heights 
    II, supra
    , 6 Cal.4th at pp. 1123-1125.)
    1.     Failure to Recirculate
    a.     Fault investigation and tunnel safety reports
    School District and City20 argue that Metro was required to recirculate the
    EIS/EIR because the new information in the final EIS/EIR – Metro’s fault
    investigation and tunnel safety reports – reversed the draft EIS/EIR’s analysis
    regarding the Century City station location, resulting in the elimination of the
    “base” station (the Santa Monica station), leaving only the “optional” alternative
    (the Constellation station). Therefore, they contend the new information was
    necessary and dispositive to the Metro board’s selection of the Constellation
    station, and thus constituted “significant new information” requiring recirculation.
    We disagree.
    In Laurel Heights II, the Supreme Court addressed the meaning of the
    statutory phrase “significant new information,” which is not defined in the statutes
    19
    Public Resources Code section 21092.1 provides: “When significant new
    information is added to an environmental impact report after notice has been given
    pursuant to Section 21092 and consultation has occurred pursuant to Sections 21104 and
    21153, but prior to certification, the public agency shall give notice again pursuant to
    Section 21092, and consult again pursuant to Sections 21104 and 21153 before certifying
    the environmental impact report.”
    20
    In its opening brief, City incorporated by reference School District’s opening brief
    on this issue.
    43
    or the Guidelines. (Laurel Heights 
    II, supra
    , 6 Cal.4th at p. 1126.) The Court
    concluded “that the addition of new information to an EIR after the close of the
    public comment period is not ‘significant’ unless the EIR is changed in a way that
    deprives the public of a meaningful opportunity to comment upon a substantial
    adverse environmental effect of the project or a feasible way to mitigate or avoid
    such an effect (including a feasible project alternative) that the project’s
    proponents have declined to implement.” (Id. at p. 1129.) The Court noted that
    “recirculation is not required where the new information added to the EIR ‘merely
    clarifies or amplifies [citations] or makes insignificant modifications in [citation]
    an adequate EIR.’ [Citation.] On the other hand, recirculation is required, for
    example, when the new information added to an EIR discloses: (1) a new
    substantial environmental impact resulting from the project or from a new
    mitigation measure proposed to be implemented [citation]; (2) a substantial
    increase in the severity of an environmental impact unless mitigation measures are
    adopted that reduce the impact to a level of insignificance [citation]; (3) a feasible
    project alternative or mitigation measure that clearly would lessen the
    environmental impacts of the project, but which the project’s proponents decline to
    adopt [citation]; or (4) that the draft EIR was so fundamentally and basically
    inadequate and conclusory in nature that public comment on the draft was in effect
    meaningless [citation].” (Id. at pp. 1129-1130.)
    An agency’s determination not to recirculate an EIR is given substantial
    deference and is presumed to be correct. A party challenging the determination
    bears the burden of showing that substantial evidence does not support the
    agency’s decision not to recirculate. (Western Placer Citizens for an Agricultural
    & Rural Environment v. County of Placer (2006) 
    144 Cal. App. 4th 890
    , 903
    (Western Placer Citizens).)
    44
    In the present case, School District and City contend that Metro’s decision
    not to recirculate the EIS/EIR is not supported by substantial evidence because
    “the new studies in the final EIR reached conclusions that were materially different
    from what was suggested by the preliminary information in the draft EIR.” Indeed,
    School District and City argue that the draft EIS/EIR’s analysis was reversed in
    several ways, thus depriving the public of a meaningful opportunity to comment
    upon a substantial environmental effect of the Project.
    First, they assert that the draft EIS/EIR stated that “the . . . existence of the
    [West Beverly Hills Lineament] was doubtful,” but the final EIS/EIR stated that it
    existed and required Metro to eliminate the Santa Monica station from
    consideration. Second, they assert that the draft EIS/EIR stated that the Santa
    Monica station was compromised by its proximity to the Santa Monica fault zone
    but it was a viable option, while the final EIS/EIR stated that the fault zone
    extended so far to the east that there was no viable station location on Santa
    Monica Boulevard in Century City. Third, they assert that the draft EIS/EIR
    referred to the Santa Monica station as the “base” station and to the Constellation
    station as the “optional” alternative that has less seismic risk, but the final EIS/EIR
    removed those designations and said that the Constellation station was the only
    choice. Finally, they assert that the draft EIS/EIR did not discuss the
    environmental issues presented by running a subway under the high school since
    that alignment would not be necessary if Metro selected the “base” Santa Monica
    station, and that the final EIS/EIR “concluded for the first time” that it was
    necessary to tunnel under the high school.
    School District and City mischaracterize the contents and analysis of the
    draft EIS/EIR. In their view, the draft EIS/EIR considered the Santa Monica
    station to be the primary choice for the Century City station, with the Constellation
    45
    station being a “backup” choice that was not subjected to much scrutiny. They are
    mistaken.
    Although they are correct that the draft EIS/EIR referred to the Santa
    Monica station as the “base” station and the Constellation station as the option, the
    conclusion they draw from the use of those terms is not. Those terms have to do
    with how the Project was developed rather than how they were viewed and
    evaluated in the draft EIS/EIR. When Metro began the AA study, it chose various
    alignments to use in early scoping that represented street rights-of-way that could
    be used for at-grade, elevated, or subway configurations. The possible stations,
    therefore, necessarily were along those streets, and thus were “base” stations.
    When Metro received comments during early scoping suggesting route alignment
    deviations and alternative potential station locations, such as the Constellation
    station, those potential locations were added as options. But even though the draft
    EIS/EIR continued to refer to the Santa Monica station as the “base” station, it
    evaluated both locations equally. Indeed, in its section on the Century City station
    and alignment, the draft EIS/EIR stated that it would begin “by highlighting the
    differences between the two location options for a Century City station.” (Italics
    added.)
    School District and City also are mistaken when they assert that the draft
    EIS/EIR did not address environmental issues arising from tunneling under the
    high school. In fact, the draft EIS/EIR examined the noise and vibration impacts
    from operating the subway under the high school, and from the construction of
    tunnels generally. It found that recommended mitigation measures would reduce
    any noise or vibration impacts from operation of the subway to below the threshold
    of significance. It also found that the equipment used for underground tunnel
    construction could generate vibration levels that might result in audible ground-
    borne noise levels in buildings at the surface, although it noted Metro did not
    46
    receive any noise complaints when tunneling for the Metro Gold Line Eastside
    Extension, and recommended several mitigation measures to reduce the potential
    for noise and vibration during construction.
    Finally, School District and City mischaracterize the draft EIS/EIR’s
    discussions of the West Beverly Hills Lineament and the Santa Monica fault. The
    draft EIS/EIR did not state that the existence of the Lineament was “doubtful.”
    Instead, it stated that there was a dispute among experts, with one expert
    suggesting it may be the surface manifestation of an active fault, and another
    expert suggesting that it does not exist. Therefore, the draft EIS/EIR stated that the
    prospect that the Lineament is the surface manifestation of an active fault had not
    been confirmed and that further evaluation of the Lineament and its significance to
    the Project would be performed during the design level phase. With regard to the
    Santa Monica fault, the draft EIS/EIR did not state that the Santa Monica station
    was a viable option despite its proximity to the Santa Monica fault. Instead, it
    warned in its section evaluating the Century City stations and alignments that the
    Santa Monica station location “is compromised by its close proximity to the Santa
    Monica Fault.” And in its section on geologic hazards, the draft EIS/EIR included
    a map showing various faults in the area along with the possible alignments and
    stations, which indicated that the Santa Monica fault might run through the Santa
    Monica station location. Moreover, the Geotechnical and Hazardous Materials
    Technical Report (from which the draft EIS/EIR took the information in its
    geologic hazard section, and which the draft EIS/EIR noted included additional
    information) indicated that there was an ongoing study to determine the exact
    location of the Santa Monica fault.
    In short, the draft EIS/EIR presented two options for the Century City
    station, discussed the potential environmental impacts of both stations, including
    the impacts of tunneling under the high school, and indicated that one of the two
    47
    options – the Santa Monica station – might not be viable due to seismic risk but
    that further studies were being conducted to determine whether that option is
    viable. The public was given an opportunity to comment on the environmental
    impacts of both station options, and School District and City took advantage of that
    opportunity.
    The new information in the final EIS/EIR merely confirmed that the Santa
    Monica station was, in fact, not viable because the Santa Monica fault ran through
    that location, and that an alternate station further east on Santa Monica Boulevard
    was not viable because it was not possible to rule out the existence of an active
    fault at that location. The new information also confirmed and expanded upon the
    draft EIS/EIR’s analysis of the potential environmental impacts from the
    Constellation station. The elimination of the Santa Monica station as an option did
    nothing to change the potential environmental impacts of the Project, other than to
    eliminate a potential source of seismic hazard. (See California Native Plant
    Society v. City of Santa Cruz (2009) 
    177 Cal. App. 4th 957
    , 981 [agency may reject
    as infeasible an alternative that was identified in draft EIR as potentially feasible].)
    Thus, we conclude that substantial evidence supports Metro’s decision not to
    recirculate the EIS/EIR due to the additional fault study and tunnel safety study,
    because the EIS/EIR was not changed in a way that deprived the public of a
    meaningful opportunity to comment upon a substantial adverse environmental
    effect of the Project or a feasible way to mitigate or avoid any such effect. (Laurel
    Heights 
    II, supra
    , 6 Cal.4th at p. 1129.)
    b.   Air quality impacts
    In its appeal, City contends that Metro abused its discretion by failing to
    recirculate the EIS/EIR because when the final EIS/EIR was released it reported
    48
    significant new air quality impacts and greatly lengthened construction times. We
    disagree.
    In addressing the air quality impacts from construction, the draft EIS/EIR
    noted that the construction schedule was very preliminary at that point in time.
    The Air Quality Technical Report circulated with the draft EIS/EIR explained that
    “[o]nce a detailed construction schedule is developed, a more refined construction
    analysis will be conducted to determine the air quality impacts of construction.”
    When the final EIS/EIR was released in March 2012, it reported significantly
    higher levels of air quality construction impacts than was reported in the draft
    EIS/EIR, and stated that many of those impacts could not be mitigated to levels
    below SCAQMD thresholds for most pollutants. It noted that these elevated
    impacts were due to the accelerated construction schedule that was developed to
    minimize the disturbances to residents and business caused by construction.
    In May 2012, before the Metro board recertified the final EIS/EIR, Metro
    issued an addendum to the final EIS/EIR that reduced the reported impacts to the
    same (or lower) levels as reported in the draft EIS/EIR. The addendum was based
    upon an air quality construction impacts memorandum that Metro issued in May
    2012 to supplement the air quality technical report issued in August 2010 and an
    air quality memorandum issued in December 2011. The May 2012 memorandum
    explained that since publication of the final EIS/EIR, further refinements to the
    construction approach and schedule resulted from additional engineering efforts.
    For example, the analysis in the final EIS/EIR assumed there would be 8
    diesel locomotives at certain sites, each operating for 20 hours per day. Upon
    further review, the schedule was revised to assume 2 diesel locomotives at each
    site, each operating for 10 hours per day. Also, the final EIS/EIR assumed that
    most pieces of equipment would be operating for 8 to 10 hours per day, but upon
    review it was determined that this assumption was very unlikely, because typical
    49
    construction equipment is only utilized for a fraction of that time. Therefore, the
    revised construction plan used a more realistic operations schedule, and applied
    utilization rates ranging from 0.25 to 0.75. In addition, the excavated dirt
    quantities were revised downward based upon the most current construction
    information, which reduced the daily truck count for hauling the excavated
    material. As a result, the 80 to 120 haul truck trips that had been assumed in the
    final EIS/EIR were reduced to 40 to 100 haul truck trips per day at each station.
    Finally, the emissions from on-road vehicles had been calculated with an outdated
    California Air Resources Board program; in the new analysis, those emissions
    were calculated using the latest program.
    Under the new analysis, the addendum to the final EIS/EIR reported that
    under both the concurrent construction and the phased construction scenarios,
    SCAQMD thresholds would be exceeded for nitrous oxides for a typical station
    with a TBM entry/exit site, but they would not be exceeded for a typical station
    without a TBM entry/exit site or for the maintenance facility. For construction of
    the entire Project, SCAQMD thresholds would be exceeded for nitrous oxides and
    particulate matter without implementation of mitigation. With implementation of
    the recommended mitigation measures, the levels of particulate matter will be
    reduced to below SCAQMD thresholds, but the nitrous oxide levels, although
    reduced, would remain above the threshold. This is the same conclusion reached
    in the draft EIS/EIR.
    Despite the issuance of the Addendum before the final EIS/EIR was
    recertified, City argues that Metro violated CEQA by failing to recirculate the
    EIS/EIR because Metro approved Phase 1 of the Project before the Addendum was
    issued and because the Addendum did not explain the refinements that led to the
    reduction of reported impacts. These arguments are unconvincing.
    50
    First, no purpose would be served by recirculating the EIS/EIR given the
    fact that the final EIS/EIR, with the Addendum, was recertified at the May 2012
    Metro board meeting when the board approved Phases 2 and 3, and it disclosed no
    new impacts. And, since Phases 2 and 3 are dependent upon completion of Phase
    1, it can be assumed that the Metro board impliedly re-approved Phase 1 under the
    amended final EIS/EIR.
    Second, the fact that the explanation for the construction refinements that led
    to the changes noted in the Addendum are found in the air quality construction
    impacts memorandum rather than in the Addendum itself is irrelevant. The issue
    on appeal is whether there is substantial evidence to support Metro’s decision not
    to recirculate the EIS/EIR. The air quality construction impacts memorandum
    supports Metro’s decision and is part of the administrative record. (See Western
    Placer 
    Citizens, supra
    , 144 Cal.App.4th at pp. 901-902, 906 [information not
    contained in EIR, but in a document in the administrative record constituted
    substantial evidence supporting agency’s decision not to recirculate].) Thus, City’s
    argument that Metro violated CEQA by not recirculating the EIS/EIR due to new
    air quality impacts information fails.
    City’s argument that Metro violated CEQA by not recirculating because the
    final EIS/EIR included significantly increased construction duration, which
    necessarily will increase the environmental impacts, fails because it is contrary to
    the facts. City notes that the draft EIS/EIR stated that construction of each station
    would take approximately 48 months, but that the final EIS/EIR stated that
    construction would take approximately 84 months. While it is true that the final
    EIS/EIR reported an increase in the time from excavation to station completion, the
    actual duration of construction is unchanged from the draft EIS/EIR, as shown in
    each EIS/EIR’s table entitled “Generalized Sequence and Approximate Duration of
    Construction Activities.” Metro explains in its respondent’s brief that the final
    51
    EIS/EIR includes in its 84-month estimation an approximately two year gap
    between the time the station is excavated and the time the station is actually
    constructed, during which the tunnel between stations will be constructed. Thus,
    Metro contends it “did not alter the information presented in the Draft EIS/EIR, it
    merely changed how that information is presented.” In any event, the final
    EIS/EIR did not increase the size of the Project or the amount (or kind) of work it
    will take to construct it. And, since the draft EIS/EIR based its significance
    conclusions on the intensity of the impacts rather than their duration, those
    conclusions did not change. Therefore, substantial evidence supports Metro’s
    decision not to recirculate the EIS/EIR based upon the final EIS/EIR’s statement
    regarding the time from excavation to station completion.
    2.     Adequacy of the EIS/EIR
    City contends that the EIS/EIR was legally inadequate because it failed to
    analyze localized air pollution and public health impacts from construction of the
    Project. To determine whether Metro abused its discretion by certifying a legally
    inadequate EIS/EIR, we must determine whether CEQA requires such an analysis.
    
    (Vineyard, supra
    , 40 Cal.4th at p. 435.)
    City argues that CEQA requires lead agencies to analyze all of a project’s
    potentially significant environmental impacts. (See, e.g., Pub. Resources Code,
    § 21100, subd. (b)(1).) It notes that the EIS/EIR compared the air quality
    construction emission rates only to “Mass Daily Thresholds” established by
    SCAQMD, which only assess whether a project has significant adverse regional
    effects. It contends that, under the holding of Riverwatch v. County of San Diego
    (1999) 
    76 Cal. App. 4th 1428
    (Riverwatch), Metro could not rely exclusively on the
    SCAQMD thresholds because they do not “‘measure all project-related pollution’”
    impacts. (Citing 
    Riverwatch, supra
    , at p. 1455.) Riverwatch is inapposite. In that
    52
    case, the issue was the lead agency’s failure to consider all sources of emissions
    against a threshold when concluding that the proposed project would not result in a
    significant air quality impact. (Ibid.) That case does not stand for the proposition
    that an agency must analyze air quality impacts against localized significance
    thresholds when it has analyzed the impacts against thresholds established by its
    local regional air quality management district. Indeed, City does not cite to any
    case, statute, or Guideline with such a requirement.
    Similarly, City does not cite to any case, statute, or Guideline to support its
    assertion that the EIS/EIR was required include an analysis showing how the actual
    construction emissions will specifically impact public health. CEQA requires EIRs
    to include any “health and safety problems caused by the physical changes” in the
    environment as a result of the Project. (Guidelines, § 15126.2, subd. (a).) The
    EIS/EIR in this case was circulated with an air quality technical report that
    identified the potential adverse health effects of exposure to each of the identified
    pollutants. The cases City cites, Bakersfield Citizens for Local Control v. City of
    Bakersfield (2004) 
    124 Cal. App. 4th 1184
    (Bakersfield Citizens) and Berkeley Keep
    Jets Over the Bay Com. v. Board of Port Cmrs. (2001) 
    91 Cal. App. 4th 1344
    (Berkeley Keep Jets), do not require anything more.
    In Bakersfield Citizens, the EIRs indicated that the projects at issue might
    result in an overall increase in air pollution, but did not acknowledge the health
    consequences that result from the identified air quality impacts. The appellate
    court observed that “[a]fter reading the EIR’s, the public would have no idea of the
    health consequences that result when more pollutants are added to a nonattainment
    basin,” and ordered that on remand, the new EIRs identify and analyze the health
    impacts resulting from the identified air quality impacts. (Bakersfield 
    Citizens, supra
    , 124 Cal.App.4th at p. 1220.)
    53
    In Berkeley Keep Jets, the EIR stated that the public health impact of certain
    emissions was unknown, and that there was no standard for evaluating the risk
    associated with those emissions. In fact, the lead agency had been provided with
    “[v]oluminous documentary evidence” showing that an approved and standardized
    protocol that would enable the agency to conduct a health risk assessment did
    exist. (Berkeley Keep 
    Jets, supra
    , 91 Cal.App.4th at p. 1368.) Not surprisingly,
    the appellate court found that the agency violated CEQA because it failed “to do
    the necessary work to educate itself about the different methodologies [for
    assessing health risks] that are available.” (Id. at p. 1370, italics omitted.)
    Neither of these cases support City’s argument that Metro’s analysis of
    health risks was inadequate to comply with CEQA. “‘CEQA requires an EIR to
    reflect a good faith effort at full disclosure; it does not mandate perfection, nor
    does it require an analysis to be exhaustive.’ [Citation.] Analysis in an EIR ‘must
    be specific enough to permit informed decision making and public participation.
    . . . The need for thorough discussion and analysis is not to be construed
    unreasonably, however, to serve as an easy way of defeating projects. “Absolute
    perfection is not required . . . .” [Citations.]’ [Citation.]” (Western Placer
    
    Citizens, supra
    , 144 Cal.App.4th at p. 899.)
    We conclude that Metro fully complied with CEQA and did not abuse its
    discretion by certifying the EIR/EIS.
    B.    Transit Hearing
    1.     Background on Sections 30639 to 30645
    In 1964, the California Legislature declared there was “an imperative need
    for a comprehensive mass rapid transit system in the southern California area, and
    particularly in Los Angeles County.” (§ 30001, subd. (a).) It found that the then-
    existing Los Angeles Metropolitan Transit Authority (Transit Authority) was
    54
    unable to solve the transit problems of the southern California area due to its
    limited powers. Therefore, the Legislature enacted the Southern California Rapid
    Transit District Law (the Act), which created a successor corporation to the Transit
    Authority, the Southern California Rapid Transit District (Metro’s predecessor).
    (§§ 30000, 30001, 130051.14.) The Act included provisions for creation of the
    District, its government, the retirement system and employment benefits of its
    employees, its powers and functions, and its funding.
    An important goal of the Act was to create a transit authority that was
    responsive to local concerns. As the author of the Act explained in a hearing
    before the Assembly Interim Committee on Transportation and Commerce in
    February 1964 explained, the Transit Authority had a history of not working with
    local communities and local jurisdictions: “in developing their system they did not
    first come to local government, but they more or less gave to local government the
    fait accompli.” (Sen. Thomas M. Ress, testimony before Assem. Interim Com. on
    Transportation & Commerce, proposed legislation on Los Angeles Metropolitan
    Area Rapid Transit (hearings of Feb. 17-18, 1964) p. 10.) One of the ways the Act
    addressed this problem was to provide that the board of the District would consist
    of 11 members: five appointed by the Board of Supervisors of the County of Los
    Angeles (who may or may not be members of the Board of Supervisors), two
    appointed by the Mayor of the City of Los Angeles, subject to confirmation by the
    City Council of the City of Los Angeles (those appointees may or may not be
    members of the City Council), and four by the city selection committee (each of
    whom must be an elected city official, a resident of a different city, and not a
    resident of the City of Los Angeles). (§ 30201.) In addition, the Act included
    provisions allowing a city or county to request a hearing before the District’s (now
    Metro’s) board as to the reasonableness of rates or charges and as to any proposal
    55
    for fixing the location of facilities. Those provisions are found in sections 30639
    through 30645.
    Section 30639 provides that “[t]he board of supervisors of a county, or the
    governing body of a city having territory located within the district may file a
    request for a hearing before the district board as to the reasonableness of any rates
    or charges fixed by the district and as to any proposal for fixing the location of
    facilities by the district. The request shall be in writing and shall state the subject
    matter on which a hearing is desired.”
    Sections 30640 and 30641 govern setting and giving notice of the time and
    place of the hearing (§ 30640) and provide for intervention by any board of
    supervisors or city governing body eligible to file a request for hearing (§ 30641).
    Sections 30642 and 30643 govern how the hearing is to be conducted.
    Section 30642 provides: “The district, petitioner or petitioners, and the intervenors
    shall have the right to call and examine witnesses; to introduce exhibits; to cross-
    examine opposing witnesses on any matter relevant to the issues even though that
    matter was not covered in direct examination; and to rebut evidence introduced by
    other parties.” The admission of evidence is governed by section 30643, which
    provides: “Oral evidence shall be taken only on oath or affirmation. The hearing
    need not be conducted according to technical rules relating to evidences and
    witnesses. Any relevant evidence shall be admitted if it is the sort of evidence on
    which responsible persons are accustomed to rely in the conduct of serious
    business affairs, regardless of the existence of any common law or statutory rule
    which might make improper the admission of such evidence over objection in a
    civil action. Hearsay evidence may be used for the purpose of supplementing or
    explaining any direct evidence but shall not be sufficient in itself to support a
    finding unless it would be admissible over objection in a civil action.”
    56
    The remaining provisions require that a complete record of all proceedings
    before the board at a hearing be prepared (§ 30644), and require the board to
    render its decision in writing with written findings of fact within 30 days after the
    conclusion of the hearing (§ 30645).
    2.     Summary of Relevant Facts
    In the present case, as noted, a transit hearing under section 30639 was
    conducted at City’s request, at which Metro presented documentary evidence, but
    no witnesses. After City presented the testimony of several expert witnesses and
    arguments from counsel, the hearing was concluded, except for public comment.
    The public comment period was held at the start of the next meeting of the Metro
    board. At the conclusion of the public comment period, the board began its regular
    meeting. When the board took up the agenda item to consider adopting the
    decision with findings for the transit hearing, it asked to hear from Metro staff and
    a group of Metro’s experts. Following presentations from the staff and experts,
    and public comment, the board voted to adopt the decision and findings, choosing
    the Constellation station and alignment set forth in the final EIS/EIR.
    In challenging the board’s decision from the transit hearing, City argues that
    Metro failed to comply with the statutes governing transit hearings, and deprived it
    of its right to a fair hearing. We disagree.
    3.     City’s Assertion that the Transit Hearing was an Unlawful Sham
    City’s contention that the transit hearing was a sham is based upon its
    assertion that the Metro board had prejudged the issue regarding the location of the
    Century City station because it had already adopted findings of fact covering the
    entire Project, including the Constellation station. There are two problems with
    City’s contention.
    57
    First, the board did not adopt findings of fact for the entire Project before the
    transit hearing. Although Metro staff, in advance of the April 26, 2012 board
    meeting, had prepared draft findings that covered the entire Project, staff revised
    those draft findings to delete the findings related to Phase 2 and Phase 3 after City
    requested a transit hearing three days before the board meeting. At the April 26
    board meeting, the board approved and adopted the revised findings.21
    Second, even if Metro’s actions at the April 26 board meeting were evidence
    that the Metro board had already decided on the Constellation station location (a
    finding we do not make), City’s assertion that Metro violated City’s right to a fair
    hearing nevertheless fails. City’s argument is premised on its assumption that
    Metro was acting in an adjudicatory capacity with regard to the transit hearing.
    Thus, it relies upon cases finding violations of fair hearing requirements in
    administrative adjudication hearings. (See, e.g., Nasha v. City of Los Angeles
    (2004) 
    125 Cal. App. 4th 470
    , 482 [planning commission proceeding was quasi-
    judicial rather than quasi-legislative]; Golden Day Schools, Inc. v. State Dept. of
    Education (2000) 
    83 Cal. App. 4th 695
    , 703-710 [involving administrative
    adjudication implicating liberty rights of daycare operator].) But, as Metro
    21
    Unfortunately, in preparing the administrative record in this case, Metro placed the
    unadopted version of the findings of fact at the beginning of the record and identified
    them as the “Westside Subway Extension Project Findings of Fact and Statement of
    Overriding Considerations” dated April 2012. The version that was adopted in April,
    however, is listed in the section of the administrative record index labeled “Agendas and
    Staff Reports,” and is entitled in the index, “Attachment D to April 18, 2012 Staff Report:
    Findings of Fact and Statement of Overriding Considerations.” City suggests that we
    find “such a confused administrative record ‘inadequate for review’ and set aside the
    agency’s approval for this reason alone.” We decline to do so. While it may have been
    difficult to find the revised findings in the more than 120,000-page administrative record,
    the transcript of the April 26, 2012 board meeting clearly shows that the findings of fact
    were revised as a result of City’s request for a transit hearing, and the revised agenda for
    that meeting includes a link to the revised findings of fact.
    58
    observes, its decision on the station location and alignment is legislative, not
    adjudicative.22 (See, e.g., Oceanside Marina Towers Assn. v. Oceanside
    Community Development Com. (1986) 
    187 Cal. App. 3d 735
    , 745 [“decisions of
    public entities as to the location of public improvements are legislative in
    character”].) City contends in substance that because the statutes governing the
    transit hearing specify certain procedures associated with judicial decision-making,
    Metro was acting in a quasi-judicial capacity. But it is the nature of the decision
    made, not the attributes of the proceeding held before the decision, that determines
    whether the process is quasi-judicial. (Id. at p. 746, fn. 8.) The fact that the transit
    hearing employed procedures characteristic of the judicial process did not
    “‘convert the proceeding into a quasi judicial function.’” (Anaheim Redevelopment
    Agency v. Dusek (1987) 
    193 Cal. App. 3d 249
    , 260; see also Joint Council of Interns
    & Residents v. Board of Supervisors (1989) 
    210 Cal. App. 3d 1202
    , 1211-1212.)
    And, the rules against prejudgment of adjudicatory facts do not apply to quasi-
    legislative decisions. (See 
    Wilson, supra
    , 256 Cal.App.2d at pp. 286-287 [“Any
    claim of prejudgment, bias or prejudice in favor of this policy [which
    predetermined the outcome] on the part of the four directors in acting upon the
    petitions is beside the point. Decisions of a governing board of a quasi-legislative
    character are expected to reflect the majority will of its constituents on matters of
    quasi-legislative policy. This is the essence of representative government”].)
    In short, City’s contention that the transit hearing was an unlawful sham fails
    both on the facts and on the law.
    22
    For this reason, City’s argument under Code of Civil Procedure section 1094.5
    fails because that section “authorizes judicial review only of the exercise by an
    administrative agency of an adjudicatory or quasi-judicial function.” (Wilson v. Hidden
    Valley Mun. Water Dist. (1967) 
    256 Cal. App. 2d 271
    , 277-278 (Wilson).)
    59
    2.     City’s Assertion that Metro’s Conduct of the Transit Hearing Did Not
    Comply With the Statutory Requirements
    In a related argument, City contends that Metro “manipulated” the transit
    hearing procedures to prevent City from cross-examining or rebutting Metro’s
    expert witnesses by submitting only documentary evidence at the hearing rather
    than calling its expert witnesses to testify. In making this argument, City ignores
    both the changed legal landscape surrounding decisions regarding the development
    of transit routes and City’s stated purpose in requesting the transit hearing.
    At the time the transit hearing statutes were enacted, there had been no legal
    requirement that Metro consult with cities or local communities when developing
    new transit routes or facilities. CEQA, which was enacted six years after the
    transit hearing statutes were enacted, changed that. Under CEQA, Metro is
    required to issue an EIS/EIR providing information regarding how its proposal to
    fix the location of stations and alignments was developed, and the possible effects
    those station locations and alignments will have on the community. It also is
    required to solicit -- and respond to -- input from local governments affected by
    those stations locations or alignments. (Pub. Resources Code, § 21091, subd. (d);
    Guidelines, §§ 15083, 15086, 15088; see also Ballona Wetlands Land Trust v. City
    of Los Angeles (2011) 
    201 Cal. App. 4th 455
    , 475.) And, if that input (from a local
    government or any other person or entity) is at variance with Metro’s position,
    Metro must address in detail, with good faith and reasoned analysis, the
    recommendations or objections given by the local government or other person and
    give reasons why Metro did not accept those recommendations. (Guidelines,
    § 15088, subd. (c).)
    In the present case, by the time City requested a transit hearing, it had
    reviewed the EIS/EIR and provided Metro with extensive input regarding the
    location of the Century City station and alignment, in the form of comments during
    60
    scoping and following the release of the draft EIS/EIR, and reports from seismic
    and risk assessment experts that City had commissioned. It also had received
    detailed responses to both its comments and its expert reports. Unsatisfied, it
    requested a transit hearing.
    Under section 30639, when requesting a transit hearing as to a proposal for
    fixing the location of facilities, the entity requesting the hearing must “state the
    subject matter on which a hearing is desired.” (§ 30639.) In its request, City stated
    that the reason for its request was that it believed that “[i]mportant information
    concerning the impacts of the proposed location of the subway station and
    alignment, and alternatives to the proposed station and/or alignment location” had
    not been fully analyzed by the Metro board, and that City, Metro, and the public
    would benefit from a hearing on those subjects before the board made any decision
    regarding the Project. In his opening statement at the transit hearing, the City
    Attorney reiterated City’s reason for requesting a hearing: “to provide [the board]
    with information that will allow you to make a choice that does not involve
    tunneling underneath Beverly Hills High School,” although he believed that after
    receiving this information, the board would want even more information before
    making its decision on the station location and alignment. Following City’s
    presentation of that information, City’s retained counsel urged the board not to
    make a station location or alignment decision because further study and
    investigation were needed. The City Attorney then concluded City’s presentation
    by reiterating to the board that it still needed information before it could make a
    decision, and imploring the board to delay its decision until it had gathered and
    considered that additional information.
    Given that its stated purpose for requesting the transit hearing was to provide
    information that it believed was not included or properly analyzed in the EIS/EIR,
    it is not surprising that City accepted the hearing officer’s proposal to have Metro
    61
    just submit its documentary evidence -- primarily the EIS/EIR and supporting
    materials circulated with the EIS/EIR -- in order to give City the maximum time to
    make its presentation. Nor is it surprising that Metro’s documentary evidence was
    a primary focus of City’s presentation because City was attempting to show that
    the information and analyses in those documents were incomplete and/or
    inadequate. In other words, City got precisely the transit hearing it had requested.
    The fact that one of Metro’s consulting geologists, a member of its advisory
    group, TAP, and a member of its Independent Review Panel, along with Metro
    staff members spoke to the Metro board on May 24 before the board adopted its
    decision and findings does not support City’s contention that Metro violated
    section 30642. First, the undisputed evidence is that both the transit hearing and
    the public comment period following it had closed. Second, as we discussed,
    Metro’s decision on the location of the Century City location is a legislative
    decision in which Metro must take into account not only City’s concerns, but the
    concerns of a much larger constituency. (Anaheim Redevelopment Agency v.
    
    Dusek, supra
    , 193 Cal.App.3d at p. 260.) Those experts and staff who spoke to the
    Metro board during its consideration whether to adopt the staff recommended
    decision and findings for the transit hearing were not witnesses; they simply were
    advising the board, in its execution of its quasi-legislative duties, that the
    information City presented at the transit hearing did not alter their opinions
    regarding the selection of the Constellation station and alignment presented in the
    EIS/EIR. Section 30642 does not give City the right to cross-examine them after
    the transit hearing had ended.
    Nor does section 30642 give City the right to cross-examine the authors of
    the EIS/EIR and related reports that Metro submitted into evidence at the hearing,
    who were not witnesses at the transit hearing, as City asserts in it appellant’s
    opening brief. City acquiesced in the hearing officer’s proposal to have Metro
    62
    submit just its documentary evidence. It cannot now complain that Metro should
    have been required to present the authors of those documents as witnesses so City
    could cross-examine them.23
    3.     Metro’s Reliance on Hearsay Evidence in its Findings of Fact
    City contends that regardless whether Metro’s experts did or did not testify
    at the transit hearing, the Metro board’s decision must be set aside as unsupported
    by any substantial evidence because the board based its “siting decision” solely on
    hearsay evidence. Metro responds that City cannot raise this issue in litigation
    because it did not exhaust its administrative remedies on the issue by objecting at
    the transit hearing or during public comment at the Metro board meeting when the
    board adopted the proposed decision and findings. Metro also argues that City
    forfeited this issue on appeal because it failed to raise it in the trial court. The
    contention that a decision is not supported by substantial evidence generally is not
    waived or forfeited by failure to object below. (Tahoe National Bank v. Phillips
    (1971) 
    4 Cal. 3d 11
    , 23, fn. 17.) Moreover, Metro’s contention that hearsay can be
    relied upon in an administrative hearing if it is not objected to (citing Borror v.
    Department of Investment (1971) 
    15 Cal. App. 3d 531
    , 546) is incorrect in light of
    the language of section 30643, which states that hearsay evidence “shall not be
    23
    In any event, requiring Metro to produce the authors of the EIS/EIR and
    supporting reports would be entirely impractical. Those documents were the result of
    several years of studies by multiple individuals, much of it on highly technical matters
    (such as geologic hazards). Had Metro been required to produce all those who had
    contributed to the EIS/EIR and the reports, have them testify on their contributions and
    be subjected to cross-examination, the transit hearing likely would have taken weeks, if
    not months, to complete. And to what end? Given the level of detailed information and
    analysis required by CEQA, and the opportunities City and others had to comment on
    Metro’s information and analysis during scoping, the preparation of the EIS/EIR, and
    following the release of the draft EIS/EIR, it is difficult to understand what benefit would
    come from the oral presentation of highly technical matters that had already been
    produced and commented upon in written form.
    63
    sufficient in itself to support a finding unless it would be admissible over objection
    in a civil action.” (See, e.g., Martin v. State Personnel Bd. (1972) 
    26 Cal. App. 3d 573
    , 579-583 [interpreting identical language].)
    Our rejection of Metro’s waiver/forfeiture argument does not, however,
    mean that City’s argument prevails. City refers to the decision that was
    unsupported by substantial evidence as a “siting decision.” But City did not ask
    the board to make a decision on the location of the Century City station and
    alignment. Instead, it requested a hearing to present evidence that the board did
    not have sufficient information to make an informed decision about the station
    location and alignment, and specifically asked the board not to make a decision.
    Moreover, it is unclear from the language of the transit hearing statutes what
    kind of decision and findings of fact are required in a hearing on a proposal for
    fixing the location of facilities. We note that throughout this case Metro has
    referred to the transit hearing as a hearing to determine the reasonableness of the
    proposed station location and alignment. But the language of section 30639 does
    not support this interpretation. It states that a county or city may file a request for
    a hearing “as to the reasonableness of any rates or charges fixed by the district and
    as to any proposal for fixing the location of facilities by the district.” (Italics
    added.) In other words, when the issue is the rates or charges fixed by Metro, the
    question at issue is the reasonableness of those rates or charges. Therefore, Metro
    must make a decision about whether the rates or charges are reasonable, and
    support that decision with findings of fact. But when the issue is a proposal for
    fixing the location of facilities, section 30639 gives no guidance as to what
    decision, if any, Metro must make, let alone what, if any, factual findings are
    needed to support it.
    Given the lack of guidance from the statute and City’s stated purpose in
    requesting a hearing, we conclude that Metro impliedly decided that, contrary to
    64
    City’s assertion, it had sufficient information to fix the station location and
    alignment, and its findings of fact can be understood as merely listing the
    information it deemed to be sufficient to support its choice of station location and
    alignment as set forth in the EIS/EIR. In other words, the documentary evidence
    was not used as proof of the matter asserted, but simply to show that it exists, and
    therefore it is not hearsay.
    DISPOSITION
    The judgments are affirmed. Metro shall recover its costs on appeal.
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    WILLHITE, J.
    We concur:
    EPSTEIN, P. J.
    MANELLA, J.
    65